32
WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < o « _l <* _J R UJ o •-> The Leading and Most Widely Circulated Weekly Newspaper In Union County i £ £ _ NO. 18 NT 3 _ Second CUM Po<Uc* P u W««tflHd, N. J. WESTFIELD, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1978 Every Thuriday 32 Pages—IS Cents Overhead Wire Construction Imminent Summit Cl. area residents will soon be hearing noise of drilling of the first Public Service Flectric & Gas Co. overhead wires along the I.ehigh Valley Railroad right-of-way Beginning of construction culminates a lengthy battle against the construction of overhead wires both by local and adjacent communities in a NOW <No Overhead Wires i organization With rendering of a final Courl decision upholding Public Service, ail avenues of appeal by local officials have been exhausted At a meeting Monday, town officials were apprised by Peter K Scheffer. division transmission engineer, and Dennis .1. Crimins. area manager for governmental affairs for PSE&G. that work will begin this month on four pole locations in West field, and that these four holes will be completed in February Seven more pole locations will be constructed in ad jacent Clark and Cranford. The overhead wire project will employ a 230 KV system Poles, located 57n feet apart, will have a base diameter of three to four feet and a top diameter of one and a half feet. The poles, fabricated in Iwo sections with sleeve provision for assembly and mounting on the site, are designed for a future second Public Service circuit and for a circuit to electrify the railroad should that decision ever be made. Signal wires, according to the Public Service officials. (Continued oo p*e*4) Cost of New WEA Contract $1 Million Plus Map shows location or four overhead wire installations in WestfleM communities of (lark and Cranford. neighboring The Westfield Board of Education's Community In- formation and Staff Relations Committees issued a joint news release today with financial information requested at a Nov. 30 public information meeting concerning (he contract between the school board and the Westfield Kducation Association, representing teachers in the school district. What is the cost to Ihe school hoard to negotiate the WKA contract? The cost, to date, to the school board to negotiate the two-year WKA contract is $10,000. This amount includes fees for the services of a professional negotiator ($55 per hour) during the teacher negotiations and when he rep resented Ihe board at hearings before PEKC (the Public Employee Relations Board) What is the additional tost to inert contract a^rrr- nients? The total dollar increase is $1,116,513. This amount - includes $i.u92.8io for a 13 2.1 percent increase over two years for salaries for classroom leachers. special elementary teachers, librarians, reading specialists, speech specialists, learning disabilities specialists, special education teachers, resource room teachers. Echo Lake Bans Sledding, Snow Sports on Golf Slopes Architect's rendering of how overhead wire poles will look upon completion. While driving shows thr poles on the northside of the l-ebigh Valle.t tracks, final plans locate the installations on the southside. Sherwood Pkwy* Residents Want Dead-end Street A 50-year tradition of sledding on the slopes of Echo Lake Country Club has come to an end with the announcement today by'the clubs trustees of a ban on snow sports ai that facility. In a statement, the trustees stated: "During the last 50 years Echo Lake Country Club has allowed the club property to be- used by the public for sled riding, skiing, tobagganing, and ice skating. "Echo Lake has had a number of accidents on our slopes over the yearh. as have other clubs in the state, causing judgments to be placed against the countryi ci.:t>s. The insurance industry has taketi a close look at such activities. and in order to maintain ihe club's in- surance and legal protection, the board of trustees finds it necessary to prohibit sleigh riding and all non-golfing ac- tivities. "We know these activities have been enjoyed by members and non-members alike, but this action has been taken to protect the club from exposure to liability for injuries. "Notices of the ban will be posted at the dub entrance and a police guard will he on duty to stop all persons from using the club property during periods of snow. "We hope you will agree that this decision has been made in the best interests of all. and all local residents will support it by refraining from use of the Echo Lake property for sledding and other non-golfing activities." nurses, social workers, guidance counselors and school psychologists: $13,703 for a 13 25 percent increase over (wo years in coaches salaries and salaries for special assignments; and Slo.lXK) for increases in teacher's special grant amounts from $225 per grant to $250 per grant. What is Ihr cost to the school hoard for lieulth in- surance'.' Health insurance costs for medical and dental plans for teachers cost the school district $470,000 in 1978. Every teacher is covered by health insurance unless he or she submits a form requesting not to be covered. The dental, health and major medical plans include four types of coverages: single, family, husband and wife, and parent and child. The school board pays the entire cost of em- ployee health plans for employees and dependents. This benefit ranges in cost from $501 annually per teacher for single coverage to $1,362 annually per teacher for family coverage. What is the total cost in education per pupil over :i ten year period? Per pupil costs over the past ten years have increased from $923 in 1969-70 to $2,209 in 1978-79. Work Begins on 79-80 Local School Budget The Westfield Board of Kducation heard School Superintendent Laurence F Oreen's annual budget message Tuesday night, began discussing preparation of a iti7!)-8<) school budget and set three discussion meetings and a public information meeting. The brard will discuss budget preparation in npen- lo-public observation meetings on Dec. 12. Dec 19 and ,/an. 2 The public is Several Sherwood Park- way residents who would like to set their street closed at the Mountainside line because of heavy traffic and high speeders, addressed Planning Board members at the group's final meeting for 1978 Monday nighL Residents fear that fur- ther commercialization by Mountainside will com- pound an already severe traffic problem on the street. Belvidere Ave., Oak Ave. and Crescent Parkway are also affected by the traffic problems, residents claim. David Norwine, 568 Sherwood Parkway, estimates some 86 children under 10 live in the area. "The speed is increasing beyond the capacity of Westfield or Mountainside police to control. Nothing we do seems to slow down traffic." he said. He also cited noisy Exxon trucks which use the street as a shortcut late at night and wake the residents. Another resident said that a car recently ended up in his backyard and that he observed some 100 cars, traveling the street in an hour. He also said the block is used as a test track for a nearby service station. Although the residents requested a cul de sac in their appeal to town of- ficials, what they really hope for is a barrier that would make the street a dead end. A cul de sac would require loss of some property to owners in the immediate area of the curve and extra expense for them. The planners said that cul de sacs are preferred, however, to accomodate emergency vehicles. Those present at the meeting said they had unanimous support for their (Continued <xi page 4} Holiday Programs Begin Holiday programs in Westfield's 11 public schools begin this week. The programs are open to the public with no charge for admission. "Seasonal selections have been chosen for Ihe programs which combine musical concepts ap- propriate to the ability of students at each level." said Jean McDermott, director of music for the school system. "There are some traditional and some modern selections." Following is the schedule for the holiday programs: Thursday, Dec. 7, Jefferson, (Continuedon page J) Fund Appeal Cites Local Services of Area Hospitals Guess Mho's coming to town Saturday, Dec. 16? Scene above relives last year's annual Christmas party hosted by the Exchange Club. Exchangites' Children's Christmas Party to Have New Location Westfield Exchangites are preparing for their 28th consecutive Christmas Party for the children of Westfield Saturday, Dec. 16. The party will begin at the Firehouse on North Ave. at 9 ajn., when the firemen's famous "cherry picker" will lift Santa and his load of presents from the Firehouse tower to a Fire truck for a trip, not to the Kialto Theatre this time, but tt> Roosevelt Junior High School at 301 Clark St. Children are urged to ap- pear at the Firehouse before 9 a.m. and join in the ex- citement In the spirit of Christmas giving, each child is asked to bring a gift in-the form of canned goods, which will be shared with the less for- tunate: this year it will once again go to the Union County Chapter of the Association For Retarded Children. Once inside the Roosevelt I Continued on psgn) Citing the community- outreach programs of three voluntary hospitals as additional health care services for Westfield residents, Mrs. Paul H. Kolterjahn, president of the Westfield Hospital Association, this week announced the opening of the organization's 18th annual campaign for funds. "We usually think of a hospital as providing ser- vices in its own buildings," Mrs. Kollerjahn said, "but Westfield's three hospitals, Muhlenberg. Overlook and Rahway, are now bringing important new services to Westfielders right in our own community." As examples of these services, Mrs. Kolterjahn mentioned the preventive community health education programs of all three hospitals, in which physicians and nurses give lectures and demonstrations to local groups to help citizens maintain good health and thus avoid ex- pensive hospital stays. In addition, Mrs. Kolter- jahn said, mobile intensive care units from Overlook (Medic 1 and 2) and Muhlen- berg (Mercy 6 and 7) made more than 150 calls in West- field last year on life-saving missions involving cardiac and other emergency in- cidents. Rahway Hospital's 24- hour Psychiatric Hot-Line offers emergency coun- seling to area residents, and Tel-Med programs at both Muhlenberg and Overlook make available up-to-date medical information by- phone to anyone who calls their special numbers. Overlook's Hospice program for the terminally ill and Muhlenberg's Home (Continued on page 4) Westfield Fire Department officials examine the special filter fence erected last wi-ek in Tamaques Park to trap oil spilled by the J.S. Irving Co. which is being cited for fin- code violations by the State Department of Knvironnu-ntal Protection. Kneeling from left are. Fire Inspector Halph Buonanno. Deputy Fire Chief I'aul liuttiluro and I'irr Chief Norman .). Kuerup. Local Firm Cited for Oil Spill Service League Pledges Funds for Local Agencies It's Sharing Time Again J The holiday season finds some Westfield families I facing not so "happy" holidays and each year many I J citizens, local groups, and school classes wish to bring • 1 happiness to a less fortunate neighbor. I J Those who would like to participate in providing for a « | less fortunate resident may call Mrs Lillian Corsi. # 1 Westfield Social Service Department. 232-8000. for fur-1 I ther details. i The Westfield Service League has made a sub- stantial contribution to the 1978 campaign of the Westfield United Fund. It is one of the largest single pledges to the appeal for funds io support the 15 member agencies, bringing the campaign total to the S195.653 level, or 62 percent of the goal of $315,000, ac- cording to Fund executives 'The Westfield Service league has been one of the mainstays of our United Fund," said Linda Maggio, executive director of the United Fund of Westfield. "We are most appreciative for the continuing support and participation from the members of the Westfield Service League. We urge all Westfielders to be as generous and to return their outstanding pledge cards now so that we may bring the 1978 campaign to a (Continuedon page 41 The J.S. Irving Co.. 600 South Ave. West, has been charged for violation of the Fire Prevention Code and may be liable for some $25,000 in penalties after an accidental oil spill occurred at that location last Wed- nesday evening According to Fire Chief Norman J. Ruerup. the firm was notified that they would be responsible to clean up the spill and report the spill to the Department of Environmental Protection. The firm did take preven- tive measures to dike the oil in order to prevent it from entering a storm sewer. The oil company was also informed by fire officials, however, that the oil should be immediately cleaned up in order to prevent the expected rain from mixing with the spill and over- flowing the dike. According to Deputy Fire Chief Paul Battiloro, who issued the summons, he found evidence of the spill in an open storm ditch in the 700 block of Knollwood Terr, and returned to the firm's location and found con- taminated rain water en- tering the storm drain in the rear of the property. Charles Payne, manager of the South Ave. branch. - told the Leader that the fire department was contacted within two minutes of the pipe burst. He said that all recommendations of the fire department were followed "to the letter" and that the oil that found its way into the sewer system consisted (if some 10 to 12 gallons that entered il at the time of the spill and of some residual oil that could not be lifted {Continued on page 4) Weyman Steengrafe to End 31-Year Adult School Career Weyman O. Steengrafe, director of the Westfield Adult School since 1947, has announced his intention to close a 31 year career of leadership in community education. The educator, author and lecturer has directed the adult school's development since 1947, when it re-opened ufter a three year war- imposed interval Under his leadership, new concepts in adult education have made this unique organization a leader. The Westfield Adult School has grown in its own merit and community ac- ceptance without accepting government aid and its .'issociated burdens. Under Steengrafe's stewardship, the Adult School has outgrown facilities at each of the town's junior high schools and is now conducted at Weslfield Senior High School, offering more courses than ever with enrollment at an all-timi* high. Forum programs presented by the adult school have included talks by Max Lerner, Norman (Continued onpage 4) invited to address the school board at the beginning of each committee- of-lhe- whole meeting (Dec. 12 and •Ian. 20* and at the begin- ning and end of the board's formal public business meeting (Dec. 19). A special public in- formation meeting about the school budget will he held on Wednesday. Jan. 3 "We are seeking public input during budget (Continued on page 4) Funding Ordinances *On Council Agenda A supplemental ap- propriation for im- provements to drove St. and funds for the purchase of various items of police radio communication equipment nre expected to win initial approval of the Town Council at its H:.'i0 o'clock public session Tuesday night. Final action will be taken at the last meeting of ihe current term. Dec. 26. Action also is expected Tuesday on ordinances extending the current zoning code, providing $:1.(IOO for a canopy on a rear portion of Ihe municipal building and setting fees for electrical construction. Routine business also will DO transacted. Recycling Information Saturday, Dec. 9 from H:30a.m.-4:3O p.m. at the South Side Railroad Station Newspaper-Glass Aluminum The center will be manned this week by Presbyterian youth, United Methodist youth and Girl Scout Troops Ml and B96. For pick up in Westfield or other information call 232- 8786. Pickups are uneconomical unless the quanitity of newspapers is lit least a three-foot high stack. Pickups will be limited to homes on the north side of town. Pickup for the soulhside of town will be on the next recycling date, Dec. 23. It is suggested that newspapers be tied in bundles or placed in shopping bags. Today's Index Pige Dusines* Directory 24 Church CLmlficJ Editorial Legal Notices Obituaries Social Sporu Theatre 23 1416 6 24 4 17-22 28,29 25

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Page 1: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

WE8TFIEL0MEMORIAL UBRAAV

VrlSTRClD, H a.

S THEWESTFIELD LEADERa: P Zm <— o «_ l <* _J

R UJo •->

The Leading and Most Widely Circulated Weekly Newspaper In Union County

i £ £ _ NO. 18NT 3 _

Second CUM Po<Uc* Pu W««tflHd, N. J. WESTFIELD, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1978 Every Thuriday 32 Pages—IS Cents

Overhead Wire Construction ImminentSummit Cl. area residents

will soon be hearing noise ofdrilling of the first PublicService Flectric & Gas Co.overhead wires along theI.ehigh Valley Railroadright-of-way• Beginning of constructionculminates a lengthy battleagainst the construction ofoverhead wires both by localand adjacent communitiesin a NOW <No OverheadWires i organization Withrendering of a final Courldecision upholding PublicService, ail avenues ofappeal by local officialshave been exhausted

At a meeting Monday,town officials were apprisedby Peter K Scheffer.division transmissionengineer, and Dennis .1.Crimins. area manager forgovernmental affairs forPSE&G. that work willbegin this month on fourpole locations in West field,and that these four holes willbe completed in FebruarySeven more pole locationswill be constructed in adjacent Clark and Cranford.

The overhead wire projectwill employ a 230 KVsystem Poles, located 57nfeet apart, will have a basediameter of three to fourfeet and a top diameter ofone and a half feet. Thepoles, fabricated in Iwosections with sleeveprovision for assembly andmounting on the site, aredesigned for a future secondPublic Service circuit andfor a circuit to electrify therailroad should that decisionever be made.

Signal wires, according tothe Public Service officials.

(Continued oo p*e*4)

Cost of New WEAContract $1 Million Plus

Map shows location or four overhead wire installations in WestfleMcommunities of (lark and Cranford.

neighboring

The Westfield Board of Education's Community In-formation and Staff Relations Committees issued a jointnews release today with financial information requestedat a Nov. 30 public information meeting concerning (hecontract between the school board and the WestfieldKducation Association, representing teachers in theschool district.

What is the cost to Ihe school hoard to negotiate theWKA contract?

The cost, to date, to the school board to negotiate thetwo-year WKA contract is $10,000. This amount includesfees for the services of a professional negotiator ($55 perhour) during the teacher negotiations and when he represented Ihe board at hearings before PEKC (the PublicEmployee Relations Board)

What is the additional tost to inert contract a^rrr-nients?

The total dollar increase is $1,116,513. This amount -includes $i.u92.8io for a 13 2.1 percent increase over twoyears for salaries for classroom leachers. specialelementary teachers, librarians, reading specialists,speech specialists, learning disabilities specialists,special education teachers, resource room teachers.

Echo Lake Bans Sledding,Snow Sports on Golf Slopes

Architect's rendering of how overhead wire poles will look upon completion. Whiledriving shows thr poles on the northside of the l-ebigh Valle.t tracks, final plans locatethe installations on the southside.

Sherwood Pkwy* ResidentsWant Dead-end Street

A 50-year tradition of sledding on theslopes of Echo Lake Country Club hascome to an end with the announcementtoday by'the clubs trustees of a ban onsnow sports ai that facility.

In a statement, the trustees stated:"During the last 50 years Echo Lake

Country Club has allowed the clubproperty to be- used by the public for sledriding, skiing, tobagganing, and iceskating.

"Echo Lake has had a number ofaccidents on our slopes over the yearh.as have other clubs in the state, causingjudgments to be placed against thecountryi ci.:t>s. The insurance industryhas taketi a close look at such activities.and in order to maintain ihe club's in-surance and legal protection, the board

of trustees finds it necessary to prohibitsleigh riding and all non-golfing ac-tivities.

"We know these activities have beenenjoyed by members and non-membersalike, but this action has been taken toprotect the club from exposure toliability for injuries.

"Notices of the ban will be posted atthe dub entrance and a police guard willhe on duty to stop all persons from usingthe club property during periods ofsnow.

"We hope you will agree that thisdecision has been made in the bestinterests of all. and all local residentswill support it by refraining from use ofthe Echo Lake property for sledding andother non-golfing activities."

nurses, social workers, guidance counselors and schoolpsychologists: $13,703 for a 13 25 percent increase over(wo years in coaches salaries and salaries for specialassignments; and Slo.lXK) for increases in teacher'sspecial grant amounts from $225 per grant to $250 pergrant.

What is Ihr cost to the school hoard for lieulth in-surance'.'

Health insurance costs for medical and dental plans forteachers cost the school district $470,000 in 1978. Everyteacher is covered by health insurance unless he or shesubmits a form requesting not to be covered. The dental,health and major medical plans include four types ofcoverages: single, family, husband and wife, and parentand child. The school board pays the entire cost of em-ployee health plans for employees and dependents. Thisbenefit ranges in cost from $501 annually per teacher forsingle coverage to $1,362 annually per teacher for familycoverage.

What is the total cost in education per pupil over :i tenyear period?

Per pupil costs over the past ten years have increasedfrom $923 in 1969-70 to $2,209 in 1978-79.

Work Begins on79-80 Local

School BudgetThe Westfield Board of

Kducation heard SchoolSuperintendent Laurence FOreen's annual budgetmessage Tuesday night,b e g a n d i s c u s s i n gpreparation of a iti7!)-8<)school budget and set threediscussion meetings and apublic information meeting.

The brard will discussbudget preparation in npen-lo-public observationmeetings on Dec. 12. Dec 19and ,/an. 2 The public is

Several Sherwood Park-way residents who wouldlike to set their street closedat the Mountainside linebecause of heavy traffic andhigh speeders, addressedPlanning Board members atthe group's final meeting for1978 Monday nighL

Residents fear that fur-ther commercialization byMountainside will com-pound an already severetraffic problem on thestreet. Belvidere Ave., OakAve. and Crescent Parkwayare also affected by thetraffic problems, residents

claim.David Norwine, 568

Sherwood P a r k w a y ,estimates some 86 childrenunder 10 live in the area."The speed is increasingbeyond the capacity ofWestfield or Mountainsidepolice to control. Nothing wedo seems to slow downtraffic." he said. He alsocited noisy Exxon truckswhich use the street as ashortcut late at night andwake the residents.

Another resident said thata car recently ended up inhis backyard and that heobserved some 100 cars,traveling the street in anhour. He also said the block

is used as a test track for anearby service station.

Although the residentsrequested a cul de sac intheir appeal to town of-ficials, what they reallyhope for is a barrier thatwould make the street adead end. A cul de sac wouldrequire loss of someproperty to owners in theimmediate area of the curveand extra expense for them.The planners said that culde sacs are preferred,however, to accomodateemergency vehicles.

Those present at themeeting said they hadunanimous support for their

(Continued <xi page 4}

HolidayPrograms

BeginHoliday programs in

Westfield's 11 public schoolsbegin this week.

The programs are open tothe public with no charge foradmission.

"Seasonal selections havebeen chosen for Iheprograms which combinemusical concepts ap-propriate to the ability ofstudents at each level." saidJean McDermott, directorof music for the schoolsystem. "There are sometraditional and somemodern selections."

Following is the schedulefor the holiday programs:Thursday, Dec. 7, Jefferson,

(Continuedon page J)

Fund Appeal Cites LocalServices of Area Hospitals

Guess Mho's coming to town Saturday, Dec. 16? Sceneabove relives last year's annual Christmas party hostedby the Exchange Club.

Exchangites' Children'sChristmas Party toHave New Location

Westfield Exchangites arepreparing for their 28thconsecutive ChristmasParty for the children ofWestfield Saturday, Dec. 16.The party will begin at theFirehouse on North Ave. at 9ajn., when the firemen'sfamous "cherry picker" willlift Santa and his load ofpresents from the Firehousetower to a Fire truck for atrip, not to the KialtoTheatre this time, but tt>Roosevelt Junior HighSchool at 301 Clark St.Children are urged to ap-pear at the Firehouse before9 a.m. and join in the ex-citement

In the spirit of Christmasgiving, each child is asked tobring a gift in-the form of

canned goods, which will beshared with the less for-tunate: this year it will onceagain go to the UnionCounty Chapter of theAssociation For RetardedChildren.

Once inside the RooseveltI Continued on psgn)

Citing the community-outreach programs of threevoluntary hospitals asadditional health careservices for Westfieldresidents, Mrs. Paul H.Kolterjahn, president of theW e s t f i e l d H o s p i t a lAssociation, this weekannounced the opening ofthe organization's 18thannual campaign for funds.

"We usually think of ahospital as providing ser-vices in its own buildings,"Mrs. Kollerjahn said, "butWestfield's three hospitals,Muhlenberg. Overlook andRahway, are now bringingimportant new services toWestfielders right in ourown community."

As examples of theseservices, Mrs. Kolterjahn

mentioned the preventivec o m m u n i t y h e a l t heducation programs of allthree hospitals, in whichphysicians and nurses givelectures and demonstrationsto local groups to helpcitizens maintain goodhealth and thus avoid ex-pensive hospital stays.

In addition, Mrs. Kolter-jahn said, mobile intensivecare units from Overlook(Medic 1 and 2) and Muhlen-berg (Mercy 6 and 7) mademore than 150 calls in West-field last year on life-saving

missions involving cardiacand other emergency in-cidents.

Rahway Hospital's 24-hour Psychiatric Hot-Lineoffers emergency coun-seling to area residents, andTel-Med programs at bothMuhlenberg and Overlookmake available up-to-datemedical information by-phone to anyone who callstheir special numbers.

Overlook's Hospiceprogram for the terminallyill and Muhlenberg's Home

(Continued on page 4)

Westfield Fire Department officials examine the special filter fence erected last wi-ekin Tamaques Park to trap oil spilled by the J.S. Irving Co. which is being cited for fin-code violations by the State Department of Knvironnu-ntal Protection. Kneeling fromleft are. Fire Inspector Halph Buonanno. Deputy Fire Chief I'aul liuttiluro and I'irrChief Norman .). Kuerup.

Local Firm Cited for Oil Spill

Service League PledgesFunds for Local Agencies

It's Sharing Time Again

J The holiday season finds some Westfield families Ifacing not so "happy" holidays and each year many I

J citizens, local groups, and school classes wish to bring •1 happiness to a less fortunate neighbor. IJ Those who would like to participate in providing for a «| less fortunate resident may call Mrs Lillian Corsi. #1 Westfield Social Service Department. 232-8000. for fur-1I ther details. i

The Westfield ServiceLeague has made a sub-stantial contribution to the1978 campaign of theWestfield United Fund. It isone of the largest singlepledges to the appeal forfunds io support the 15member agencies, bringingthe campaign total to theS195.653 level, or 62 percentof the goal of $315,000, ac-cording to Fund executives

'The Westfield Serviceleague has been one of the

mainstays of our UnitedFund," said Linda Maggio,executive director of theUnited Fund of Westfield."We are most appreciativefor the continuing supportand participation from themembers of the WestfieldService League. We urge allWestfielders to be asgenerous and to return theiroutstanding pledge cardsnow so that we may bringthe 1978 campaign to a

(Continuedon page 41

The J.S. Irving Co.. 600South Ave. West, has beencharged for violation of theFire Prevention Code andmay be liable for some$25,000 in penalties after anaccidental oil spill occurredat that location last Wed-nesday evening

According to Fire ChiefNorman J. Ruerup. the firmwas notified that they wouldbe responsible to clean upthe spill and report the spillto the Department ofEnvironmental Protection.The firm did take preven-tive measures to dike the oilin order to prevent it fromentering a storm sewer.

The oil company was alsoinformed by fire officials,however, that the oil shouldbe immediately cleaned upin order to prevent theexpected rain from mixingwith the spill and over-flowing the dike.

According to Deputy FireChief Paul Battiloro, whoissued the summons, hefound evidence of the spill inan open storm ditch in the700 block of Knollwood Terr,and returned to the firm'slocation and found con-taminated rain water en-

tering the storm drain in therear of the property.

Charles Payne, managerof the South Ave. branch. -told the Leader that the firedepartment was contactedwithin two minutes of thepipe burst. He said that allrecommendations of the fire

department were followed"to the letter" and that theoil that found its way intothe sewer system consisted(if some 10 to 12 gallons thatentered il at the time of thespill and of some residualoil that could not be lifted

{Continued on page 4)

Weyman Steengrafe toEnd 31-Year Adult

School CareerWeyman O. Steengrafe,

director of the WestfieldAdult School since 1947, hasannounced his intention toclose a 31 year career ofleadership in communityeducation.

The educator, author andlecturer has directed theadult school's developmentsince 1947, when it re-openedufter a three year war-imposed interval Under hisleadership, new concepts inadult education have madethis unique organization aleader. The Westfield AdultSchool has grown in its ownmerit and community ac-

ceptance without acceptinggovernment aid and its.'issociated burdens.

Under Steengrafe'sstewardship, the AdultSchool has outgrownfacilities at each of thetown's junior high schoolsand is now conducted atWeslfield Senior HighSchool, offering morecourses than ever withenrollment at an all-timi*high.

F o r u m p r o g r a m spresented by the adultschool have included talksby Max Lerner, Norman

(Continued on page 4)

invited to address the schoolboard at the beginning ofeach committee- of-lhe-whole meeting (Dec. 12 and•Ian. 20* and at the begin-ning and end of the board'sformal public businessmeeting (Dec. 19).

A special public in-formation meeting about theschool budget will he held onWednesday. Jan. 3

"We are seeking publicinput during budget

(Continued on page 4)

FundingOrdinances *OnCouncil Agenda

A supplemental ap-propriation for im-provements to drove St. andfunds for the purchase ofvarious items of police radiocommunication equipmentnre expected to win initialapproval of the TownCouncil at its H:.'i0 o'clockpublic session Tuesdaynight. Final action will betaken at the last meeting ofihe current term. Dec. 26.

Action also is expectedTuesday on ordinancesextending the currentzoning code, providing$:1.(IOO for a canopy on a rearportion of Ihe municipalbuilding and setting fees forelectrical construction.Routine business also will DOtransacted.

RecyclingInformationSaturday, Dec. 9

fromH:30a.m.-4:3O p.m.

atthe South Side Railroad

StationNewspaper-Glass

AluminumThe center will be manned

this week by Presbyterianyouth, United Methodistyouth and Girl Scout TroopsMl and B96.

For pick up in Westfield orother information call 232-8786. Pickups areuneconomical unless thequanitity of newspapers islit least a three-foot highstack.

Pickups will be limited tohomes on the north side oftown. Pickup for thesoulhside of town will be onthe next recycling date,Dec. 23.

It is suggested thatnewspapers be tied inbundles or placed inshopping bags.

Today's IndexPige

Dusines* Directory 24ChurchCLmlficJEditorialLegal NoticesObituariesSocialSporuTheatre

231416

624

417-2228,29

25

Page 2: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

TEE WESTFIELD

To Sponsor Slides !

Of Tut

TreasuresThe Plair.firid .i.-v. sr.

Commim-'v iVr-ter i x ihtGreater West:";e-)r. Y a.iisponsor a shit • ifc:.:rc r>Thomas 1 oc^r ,:' :r.tMetropolitan V..,*t_— c:Art. on '.be Troif_-<;•.- ;•:Tutar.khin-.ur. ;•: Thurs-day, eveniri IVv : : ; ; fp m The ieciurv .-.n.-: >:\it-presentation >viii !•*• fit-'.?. .-!Temple Isr=ei jr. N:\- . \ --Plsins

Loun \> ;i! dis-cus? thedis-covery erf '.he torn!"- of

look at '.he pincelesf ^•.••rkjof art enton-.t>ed m-h :ht->oung kmg \<:il tie aviiiatvethrnjph '.he slide presen-tation.

Tickc'if car. be purcha>fam Plair.neid or Ue>'.neidcenters

Capital Savings to Open Westfield Office Saturday

A> moM people in umn know. iheConsen at ion Center on Lambert's Mill Roart closc-don [Vc. 1 - the hudcet for the center had alread> been used up. Apparent!*. thoufh.same people don't knovk that or. worse, don'i <are. O\er ihc past weekend, severalinconsiderate people dumped their garden debris at Uie enlranfes and e\ii to thetenter, creaiinc unsiphlb piles along ihe roadva>. Now. [>epartmert of 1'uhlic *Aori.smen will ha> eto be pulled oil recuiar tasks and assigned Ui the clean up. nie^rini: thaiall ia\pa>ers "ill be paMtic for the selfish actions of a feu.

Charles J. Pfost.president of Capital Savingsand Loan .Association, hasannounced that the Si30million savings and home - .financing institution will ]conduct an extensive j

celebration to mark the •official grand opening of iisnew Westfield Office at thecorner of Central Ave andGrove St. The celebrationstarts Saturda> from 10a.m. to 2 p m

According to Pfcisi. a dayof "fun and excitement" is .in store for even one at-tending Saturday's grandopening festivities. The first1W people 10 walk throughthe ne-vn office ocors will

receive a free silver dollaras an "Early Bird" gift Inaddition, free souvenirs foradults and children alikewill be given away w hile thesupply lasts.

H i g h l i g h t i n g t h ecelebration, which willcontinue at the new officeonly, through Dec. 29. willbe a choice of free gifts fordeposits Those depositingspecified amounts in a newaccount will take home oneof many free gifts, com-pliments of Capital Savings

Everyone is also invitedlo enter the Association'sSony Betamax Sweep-stakes One Sony Betamaxwill be awarded each weekfor three consecutive weeks.

Declares Dividend

a gem of an idea from marcut

diamondstud earringsin graduated

"Olympics of the Mind"Intriguing Deerfield Students

Elsie SokcO. pr«:rient of •the Central Jerse> Bank and ;Trust CorcpiT.y. has an- 'ncKinced that ibe board erfdirectors of the bar-k. ai ameeting held Nov. 22.

declared a regular quar-terly dividend of S.I"1:- plus.071:- cents extra to

stockholders of record Dec.lr> and payable Jan 2

The sweepstakes is beingconducted at the new West-field office only, whereentry blanks are" availablefor those who wish to enter.

j Pfost noted that thej opening of Capital's newj Westfield office is ' i ni keeping with thej association's program of; bringing the finest savingsj andhomefinaneing servicesi to more people throughout1 the area. We hope everyonei in and around the Westfield• area will make it a point tocome out Saturday and

I partake in all the festivities' we have planned." he! concluded| Capital Savings offers the! highest savings rates• allowed by law in the nation.I featuring a limited issue. 8-| year savings certificate that

returns 8.-15 percent ef-fective annual yield on 8.00percent a year, compoundeddaily with a minimumdeposit of $5,000. CapitalSavings also offers short-

term, six-month moneymarket certificates withinterest compounded dailyand a minimum deposit of$10,000. as well as the topregular passbook rate inAmerica. Other high-earning savings plans arealso available

Capital Savings' otheroffices are in Cranford.Fanwood. Unden-Roselle

j and Orange. TheAssociation is a member of

! the Federal Savings and; Loan Insurance Corporation|<FSLICi which insuresI accounts to S40.000.

Alfonso Parisi(formerly with John Franks)

Custom tailoring, alterationsfor both men and women

8 AM to 6 PM Mon-SatThur8 AM to 8:30 PM

106 Elm St. Wesrfield

223-1506

S99S.00

"' '.'virtues of ihe !iiind" ispeneratinp much lnieres;among Deerfield SchoolStudents in Mnan'.iinfioeAn activity designed :oemphasize and stimulatecre.ctn-e thinking and af-ferent approaches ; (•p r o b i e m • > o 1 v i n p. thisOlympics bypasses thetypical route of f.ntir.g the"rich:' answer

According to Der.rr.fEnrich!. Df*rne)d s.tien:-eleather \»ho is ser\':ri£ c>coach for the 0!>rr.p:c-j'.fiTr. ;o t«? cinxttr: ird—i n t e r e s t e d I1 e e r:': e: ;fl'jderitf. i. r u~ ' t* r 'A

;'.be ione-terrr"

•. olvemen: this >ear.expected tha; recc-ontes-ls -^iil tie fieic

Deerfieid stuoenis.n'.roduced to the pri

hijihiiEht of :hewas- i.v zp^#±rzr>shtrincin irii V::kehigh fchciol siLjber:'to:*; J-ei-ond fiii=;-eytir't s'.ite corr.ps-'.i«.l!assb-:iro 5-icte CThe s.'.'joer.-.f =':>: r-ef:lm. •Wr.y V.ir. Cr

Enrifj/ t e c i - . r ir.••d sn 1'":>—.:•;•:•<• •.. v bwher. z"-.rt±.r:C i

b> Ar.n

gthe

Minre:*

f-'iVit-ee He *.ij •-*">;* £t-

From the Marcus Cotection ofbrilliant stud earrings.

From vio carat.See why we say shopping atMarcus is a gem of an idea.

JEWELERS

SE

isr

P a i

KimCRFOKS.« ;

XACOKUCt. «.J

-.-nS!\;.'' STu.-o:

Surtint Df>c £ Open r

MDGCWODC II j

WtSTFiaO.H.J

mvEitaix toiuM i i m i irvai

•wry rveninj til 9 PM.

K-cac>- oi ibf cccif*- E ic r:e&rri prepiires a j.c>lut>:ia forthe ior:g-:^ns problem.\«h>ch :s desicned 10 t*mecharucal. auditory orvisual in nature. For in-stance, last year's com-

• petition found studentsdevising in advance a

; system 10 guide a bhnd-! folded team member along; an irregular course.: breaking balloons at

varying heights. Team, members could give onlynon-verbal commands.

. A '•spontaneous" problemwill be presented at the state

j competition, also, which is. scheduled for March. Last1 year. 26 teams participated.j and because of time con-i straints and increased in-

C>1}—.p.cs :i: -i:t M:r>3 sh:uJd.ctctec*. CT T!-»e-;o:ire JGcjrley. ere '.-f iUoeve-.opers Ke is coc-r-dixiilor •:•'. Gifted ;.r,2Talented. r>e;-ir: — 1 - \ c::

Education. Piv:':ori •: fSchool Procrams. ^ r - "A"State St . Trenton iiHSii.

Coalition to MeetThe Vnion County

Coalition for Human Ser-vices will boid its monthlymeeting on Wednesday at1:30 p.m. in the Terrace

' Room of Vnited Way.located at 634 Bas-way Ave .

; Elizabeth.Coalition meetings are

open to the public

John tranlcs 1

WITH HIM IN MIND!

Wk invite you towatch a charmingChristmas special.

who slept tM*u

i A1 ^

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207 E. BROAD ST., WESTFIELD 233-1171OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 UNTIL CHRISTMAS - SATURDAY UNTIL 6 U

Page 3: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Century 21 Taylor & LoveGrand Opening Attracts 70

Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus and he has all sorts of helpers, all over the world.Many of them were bus y In Westfleld last week, getting the down (own area decked outwith bright holiday lights. Department of Public Works men decorated the Town Yardbuilding on North Ave., evergreens on both sides of the railroad station and the Muni-cipal Building. Shown here are Walter Miller, perched high on the ladder, while ClaudeShaeffer guides the string of lights up the blue spruce.

Century 21 Taylor & LoveR e a l t o r s r e c e n t l ycelebrated the grandopening of its new locationat 436 South Ave. with anopen house party attendedby approximately 70business associates andfriends. William Taylor andRoger Love and their staffof 12 sales associates, allarrayed in Century 21 goldblazers, escorted theirarriving guests through thenewly decorated offices.

Reflecting on the changesthat have taken place in theyoung and growing firmsince its inception in 1975,Love said, "It's gratifying tosee how far we've come insuch a short lime." Startingout with just four people andthe desire to be successful inthe highly competitive realestate business, Love saidhe felt they had ac-complished that objective.Their first challenge, henoted, was to find good salesassociates. "We were for-tunate." he said, "to haveRay Richey. a 10-yearveteran of the real estatebusiness, with us from thebeginning. From there wewere pleased to attract suchfine sales associates asCarol Wood, Mary Acito.Pierce Joyce and JoanNewman, and more recentlyConnie Boylan. Fred Fox.Pauline Lloyd and PatEsposito."

Roosevelt jDance j

Nearly 450 RooseveltJunior High students arepreparing for the annualholiday program which willbe presented at 8 p.m. onDec. 13and|4uitheschool'sauditorium. Wednesdaynight's program will featurethe Treble Chorus. GleeClub, Concert Band andthree ninth grade groups -the Choir, Teenettes, andSharps and Flats. The ninthgrade groups and theConcert Band will alsoappear on Thursday night'sprogram, along with theMixed Chorus and Girls'Chorus.

The program will includetraditional Christmas carolsas well as compositions byBach, Bortniansky. and theBeatles. "No Man is anIsland," "Grandma'sChristmas Secret," "Carolof the Bells," and "Polandat Christmas" are otherselections which will befeatured.

Student accompanists forthe choral groups are:Christopher Kelly. Patricia iWesler. Margaret Siecke. IGene Kelly. Patrick Mullen, iKiki Roll, and Megan IRobinson. Bruce Conoverwill play the guitar with theGlee Club's performance ofJ o h n D e n v e r ' s"Aspenglow."

The students will performunder the direction of JohnJosa, David Shapiro, andCarol Tincber. The public isinvited to both per-formances.

Westfield Wine & Liquors219-221 E. Broad St. Westfield

232-3686

Just ArrivedOne beautiful wine

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OVER FIFTY YEARS OF INTEGRITY

GARDEN STATE PLAZALIVINGSTON MALL •

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Phone inquiries invited 233-6900 Matter Charge VISA American Expres*

The major change in thefirm occurred this pastMay, when Taylor & Ix>vedecided to join the Century21 prganization. Taylorexplained the importance ofkeeping abreast of trendsand advances in the everchanging business in orderto be successful and betterserve their clients. "Anational affiliation isessential in today's realestate business." he stated,'and we believe Century 2!s the best. Wiih its

television advertising.continuing trainingprogram, internationalreferral system, and on-going research, it providesTaylor & Love with thenecessary tools to remain aleader in the area's realestate market."

In response to a commentby one of the guests as toslowing down the pace afterthe last three exciting years.Taylor said, "Never! Wewill always continue to growand learn arid change. It'sthe key to success!"

Award WinnerBetty Stroppel of Scotch

Plains was the recipient ofthe Winsor Newton award atthe recent CatharineLorillard Wolfe Art Clubshow at the Nation Arts Clubin New York.

Memorial Pool

Staff Openings

The Memorial Pooloffice is taking ap-plications for possible jobopenings as life guards forthe upcoming 1979 season.To qualify for the position,applicants must havesenior Red Cross lifesaving certificate and be ahigh school senior or older.Interviews will be heldafter Christmas. WilliamPratt, pool administrator,suggests those interestedstop by the pool office foran application.

Mobile Meals NeedPackers and

DriversAs a non-profit

organization, Mobile Mealsis dependent on volunteersto pack and deliver hot,

| nutritious meals to anyone| needing these services.I Urgently needed are bothj packers and drivers. Those; who can volunteer an hourj or less of time weekly or•• every other week may take! a tax credit for the gasolinej used.] Contact Mobile MealsI Office, weekdays before', noon, or Mrs. Douglas! Turner of Rahway evenings.

•THE WESTnELD <NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 7. l t t t

Residents to Take Part In Lucia Fest SundayThe traditional Lucia Fest this scene with nine year old

sponsored by the Jennifer Meling of WestfieldBlacklockan Scandinavian as the Lucia. Her brotherChildren's Club will be heldSunday at GethsemaneLutheran Church inHainfield. The program willbegin at 5 p.m.

The theme for their 35thAnniversary year is "ASwedish Christmas." TheLucia commemorates theSwedish traditionalcelebration which occurs onDec. 13, the shortest day ofthe year. The oldestdaughter dresses in a whiterobe and crown of candlesand appears at her parentsbedroom door at dawn wilhcoffee and Lucia buns. Herbrothers dress as bakers,starboys and tomten (elves)and her sisters are Luciamaids. The children ofBalklockan will recreate

Per will be the narrator ofthe program.

The Children's Club isdedicated to learning andpreserving the songs,dances and traditions of theScandinavian countries.Children in the group rangein age from two through theteens and come from local

communities. The groupdressed in authenticcos tumes pe r fo rmstraditional folk dances andsongs from Norway, Swedenand Denmark.

A folk dance exhibition,refreshments, and a visitfrom Santa wilt also be onthe program. Reservationsmust be made by Saturdaywith Ernie Meling of 1067Hetfield Ave.

Santa's Elves Busy At Union CollegeSanta's elves are busy

with an unusual assignmentat Union College this month.

Hard at work in theCollege's print shop, theholiday team is intent onturning out enough giftcertificates to match thegrowing popularity of its

holiday course certificateprogram. In a collaborativeproject with Union CountyTechnical Institute and Vo-cational Center, the collegeis offering gift certificatesfor some 200 credit and non-credit courses at the twoinstitutions.

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Page 4: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

THE WXSTITEXO IW.) I - M D E B , THIRSDAV, DECEMBER 1, 1»T«-

OBITUARIESOpen House at Adult School

Maurice R. Ros* Mr*. Lillian Darbv

N5auriceK Kos-e. 72. of l•>.'Stow H;;i Kiijd Spr:r.£.iieKidied Tuc<;ia> :«i » n f

Bern in K B M » . hi? redded 'in Spnnefieid for 'he pas',nine ye.=r<- arki hvc-ci ::",Piainfield !or v >earf

He was- l-hf- c* ntr-r •:•:' theWestfield W irdov. Shop

He '*as a rr.vn.tier oi ih<?Masons Emniinue! Ltdge :nPlainfield. a r.iembtT ofTempi* Beth'Kl. Pisir.fieid.and ;i fonr.er car.ior a ITemple Isriri in s e w nPlains

Surviving ;.re his v.-,fe.Adelaide l^urse Kofe i>wdaughter. Maureen Was-? ofNew York (Tin one brother.Allan Hose of Linoen .ir,dthree sisters. Te?>M a r g o l i n . F l o r e n c e 'Parkhurst and Anne Scher

Services w ill be held todayat Temple Beth-El si 10 s*ia m Arrangements are by ;the Hscgins Home for :

Funerals. Plamfield

Mrs. Anthony

AppezzatoMrs. Mollie Sbordone

Appezzato. 69, of 902 CentralAve.. died Tuesday inMuhlenberg HospitalPlainfield

Mrs. Appezzato wasa lifelong resident oS West-field

In Ihe 1950s, she was headseamstress at McGregor's.Summit

She was a communicant ofSt. Helen's Church

She was the wife of thelate Dominick Appezzato.who died Jan 21.

Surviving are a daughter.Mrs. Linda Vaccaro ofWestfield: a son. DominickAppezzato Jr. of Westfield:four sisters. Mrs LucyMarvosa. Mrs .AnnaAppezzato and .Mrs RoseDiGirolamo. all of West-field. and Mrs AgnesDelNero of Elizabeth: twobrothers. Carmine Sbordoneof Westfield and NicolaSbordone in Italy, and fivegrandchildren

Funeral services wereheld Friday at the HossiFuneral Home. ScotchPlains, and from St. HelensChurch where a FuneralMass was offered. Inter-ment was in FairviewCemetery.

Mrs. Chester

Conrad.Mrs. Lydia C. Crow

Conrad. 62. of 618 Elm SI.died Sunday in OverlookHospital. Summit, after along illness

Mrs. Conrad was horn inEngland, and after beingbrought to this country as achild, lived in Staten islandbefore moving to Westfield5<i years ago.

She was a member of theWoman's Club and thePresbyterian Church inWestfield

Surviving are herhusband. Chester Conrad: ason. Peter Conrad of Rah-way: a daughter. Mrs.Susan Culpepper of BlueSprings. Mo., and threegrandchildren.

Funeral services wereheld yesterday at the GrayFuneral Home. 318 EastBroad St. with !he Rev.Richard L. Smith of the!Presbyterian Church of-ficiating. Interment was inFairview Cemeterv

Mrs. Wilbur

BerkebileMrs. Audra T. Berkebile.

69. of Equinunk. Pa., for-merly of Westfield. diedSunday in Reed MemorialHospital. Hancock. NY

Born in Benerdale. shelived in East Orange.Roselle and Newark Shemoved to Pennsylvania in1975.

Surviving are herhusband, Wilbur Berkebile;two daughters. Mrs. DonnaPossenriede of Carteret andMrs. Marilyn O'Conor ofWestfield: 'a sister. Mrs.Lois Swope of Lanham.Md.; her mother. Mrs. AveFleck of Lanham, and threegrandchildren.

Services were heldyesterday at the GrayFunera! Home. 318 EastBroad St. with the Hev. KeeChong Ryu of DrewUniversity officiating.

Mrs Lillian Darby. 74. of:221 Prospect Si diedSunday at the Ven-onalGenera! Hospital. I'nion

Born n; laming'.on. she» j s a resident of theWest field-Scotch P!a:ns.-.res rr.osi of her life

Arthur Wxckoff ofP I s c a i a \i a y . t h r e edaughters. Ida Pales.Lillian Carter and SadieBurton, all of Scotch Plains:;-. brother. Lester Hurlirij! oiPlair.field: 10 crandchil-

childrenArrangements are by the

Plinlon Funeral Home. WesiBread Si

Assault Suspect

ArrestedEdward Barrett of New

Bruns1* ick. .52. was arrested(or atrocious assault andbattery by Westfield policeTuesday night investigatinga stabbing"at 54-3 First Si"Police officers and (heRescue Squad conveyed thevictim. Joseph Lipes.ky. 24.of the First St address to •Railway Hospital lor ;treatment of wounds !<• hischest and neck

Sterling silver, jewelryand two nimk coats werestolen during a break. enlr>and larceny at Tice PI. onMonday Break and entrieswere also reported onNorgate. Hysiip Ave andElm St.

A cash register and its ;contents was stolen fromGreco's Chevron on Central '.Ave Friday and a van was •reported stolen from ,Sevell's on Monday.

Four juveniles werearrested for possession of •alcohol Saturday: twofemale juveniles werearrested for truancy onFriday and a juvenile wasarrested for shoplifting atthe .UP on Kim St.

One Harrison Averesident had tires stolen ;

while another had his carbattery stolen, and the car •of a teacher at Roosevelt Jr. 'High School was damagedwhile parked in the school |lot on Monday. |

Vandalism \Last Week j

Vandalism last week jincluded damage to lawn jfurniture and other outside |equipment on Hawthorne !Dr.. car windows broken on '•.West North Ave.. WestRroad St. and Ferris PI., aplate glass window broken ion Drake PI and a beer jbottle thrown through a !storm door window on |Florida St. ;

Doors were spray painted !a! Edison Jr. High School. Ithree tires were flattened onCumberland St.. a vinyl cartop was cut on CambridgeRoad, car ignition wireswere cut on a car parked onClark St. and the antennaand mirrors were broken ona car parked on N'ew Eng-land Dr.

Students CompeteIn Math ContestA team of five seventh and

eighth grade students fromRoosevelt Junior HighSchool placed first in thecounty and among the top22in the state in the first partof a five part New JerseyMathematics Leaguecontest

The students are BrianDrury. Ernest Hua. GaryMaher. Nathan Newmanand Charles Schaefer. Theywill participate in thesecond part of the contestSaturday.

Roosevelt's team isamong 181 teams of seventhand eighth grademathematics students fromall -over the state par-ticipating in the contest.Roosevelt's team was thetop scorer among 13 inI'nion County

The student's teachers areStanley Ziobro and JudithDrogin.

Monday Eveningmembers of the board of jtrustees and the citizenscommittee will be availableduring the evening forcomments, questions orsuggestions

Presently

During the final session of \classes for the fall term of 'the Westfield Adult School jon Monda\ evening, the ;community is invited to 3n '.open house and exhibition of\anous projects undertakenduring the semesterExamples of work done in

art classes, calligraphy,m i n i a t u r e f u r n i t u r e .we3\ing. and so on will be ,on display in Cafeteria B inthe high school. Refresh-ments will be served duringthe Open House andExhibition from S to 930p m

Studentsregistered

i

"Caps i or state imposedlimits on school spending1

are up. regular state aid inthe school district is down,special education aid is up.and other aids are partiallycut." School SuperintendentGreene noted

The Stale Department ofEducation has notifiedWestfield that the cap (orthis school district in iv79-8'i

percent which trans-into a permissible

dollar increase of S-6*U89

who arefor current

classes v. iil have the op-portunity to register, earlylor the spring semester inthe mam office that eveningThe complete list of course*will be available. Jack Dal>.president of the WestfieldAdult School. WeymanSteencrafe. Director. DottieBiags. registrar. and

ExchangitesCon^n^ec frr.T. ;>goe I1

School Auditorium. Santa(."laus will reign merrily.There will be the an-ticipatory buzz of about 800youthful voices. ChristmasCarols will tie sung and thekids will draw winningnumbers from a hat forprizes of toys and gamescontributed by local mer-chants

The big moment is achance to win a spankingnew bicycle: one for a luckyboy. and one for a lucky girlFun cartoons will be flashedon the screen for everyone'senjoyment, and when thekids file out after the show,there will be a loadedChristmas stocking for eachof them.

More than 18.(KKi cans offood have been distributedto Westfield's needy throughthese Yule parties since theclub's first one in 19-19. Aswell as these annual parties,the club has supported ateam in the Little League formany years, has distributed"Golden Deeds" awards tocitizens who have servedtheir community well, andhas awarded many campscholarships over the years.Chairman of this affair isJim Culpa. assisted byWoody Woodward andAngelo Morganti.

91 courses arescheduled for the Spring '• 1S ri 2

Semester. Many favorites ; lateswill be included - AncientEgypt. CPR. Interior | over the current netD e c o r a t i n g . P i c t u r e I operating school budgetFraming. Small EngineRepair, and so on Some ofthe new courses to be addedare American Drawing.Disco-Hustle. Estate andGift Tax Planning.

J a p a nese .F i n a n c e

jnd Whv Do

BeginningP e r s o n a lManagementPeople Jog"

Catologues for the next• semester will be mailed

early in the new year. Mailregistration forms will beincluded. For additionalinformation contact theregistrar. Mrs DorothyBiggs, at 324(60 from 1 to 3p.m. and 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.

Griggs PanelistAt Seminar

Richard C. Griggs.C L I'., of Benefit ServiceCompany. 133 Prospect ^t..was a guest panelist at thethird employee benefitseminar and workshop forCPA's held at the Ram a daInn. Clark. Nov. 2. Theseminar was sponsored bythe Trust Department of theL'nited Counties TrustCompany.

Oil Spill(Com.nueofrom page 1)

during the initial clean-upbefore the rain

Payne said that with theexception of some recom-mendations for safetyimprovements at thec o m p a n y . LawrenceMuzyka of the Environ-mental Protection Agencyconsiders the case closedand that the 150 gallonsmarked a small spill.

Muzyka. in-spector from the state'sOffice of Hazardous Sub-stances Control, arrivedThursday afternoon tosupervise the clean upoperation. He could issuecitations charging the firmwith spilling the oil and withfailing to notify the stateagency.

Failure to immediately. . i notify the Department of

A p p C a J Environmental Protection

D e a t h s i n v o l v i n gmotorcycle accidentsreached a record 4.082 in1977 following the repeal ofhelmet laws in 22 states, theU.S. Department of Tran-sportation reports. In 1976.there were 3.312 motorcyclerelated highway deaths.During that same periodmotorcycle registrationsincreased only one percent.

•' Coni.nuen from page 11Health Care program bringskilled and dedicatedhospital teams into manyWestfield homes.

Appealing to Westfieldresidents for continuedsupport of the hospitals.Mrs. Kolterjahn said. "Hereat home, as well as at theirmodern facilities inPlainfield. Summit andRahway. our three hospitalsare as much a part of West-field life as the morningtrains, our houses of wor-ship, our schools and ourshops. In fact, it's just notpossible to comtemplateWestfield without them.Last year 2.RO0 of our West-field friends and neighborswere patients in the threehospitals."

Since 1961. when theW e s t f i e l d Hospi . ta lAssociation was founded,community residents havecontributed more thanSl.lOO.OOOto the growth andprogress of the threehospitals. WHA is a non-p r o f i t , t a x - e x e m p tcharitable organizationwhich distributes its fundsto the three hospitals ac- icording to usage of the !hospitals by local residents. !Gifts to the association Iobtain the same maximumtax benefits for the donor asgifts made directly to theinstitutions.

Appeal letters were sentto local residents in lateNovember. Persons who didnot receive the letters maymail contributions to theW e s t f i e l d H o s p i t a lAssociation. Box 245. West-field 07090

Trustees of the WestfieldHospital Association, inaddition to Mrs. Kolterjahn.are: Dr. Richard D Snyder.vice president; Mrs. FrankSullebarger. secretary:Mrs. Mae Goldweifz,treasurer: John A. CarterJr.. Mrs. David R. Clare.Mrs. A.C. Cuckler. ArthurM. Feibush, Richard C.Griggs. Mrs David Nor-wine. Richard L. Preston.Mrs. Edgar A. Roll. Mrs.Fred A. Shorsher, Mrs.Anthony J. Stark Jr. andJohn E. Stirling.

may render the violatorliable to a penalty of up to$25,000 per day.

Muzyka asked the com-pany to bring in an outside

As of yesterday, only onesummons from the local firedepartment bad beenreceived by Payne. He saida small fine from the EPAmay be forthcoming

School Budget

I Approval was granted for• the site p!an of John K. ;• Meeker who is redoing the I; front of his garden center at; 1100 South Ave. into an open\ porch type exterior.Board •i members agreed that the [j proposed changes were an !j improvement, but Mayor j! Williams voted no on the i

.continuedfrompageu I plan, in keeping with hisd i s c u s s i o n a n d ; stance on approving onlypreparation." said Board ! complete site plans. MeekerPresident Thomas F. j had discussed with the townSullivan "We will be happy j engineer who not present atto hear from members of thepublic as we discuss andprepare an educationallyand fiscally sound schoolbudget for next year Wemay not agree witheverything everyone says.but we will listen to

g pthe meeting, i omitting from

• the plan additional parkingd b h

everyone " He urgedcitizens to attend thesemeetings and to offersugeestions and input

• - • •

p p gspaces not required by thezoning ordinance.

In other business, theboard approved the finalplat submitted for SureneBuilding Company forsubdividing property forhouses at Fairacres Ave.and Gallows Hill Road.

Meeker later asked the

• ' • •FUKEBAL DISECTOBS

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WEETFIELD (3? i EAST 8ROAOSTREET 5FRED H. GRAY" JR. tJGri.PHOKE 133-01*3

:? B^RIMGFIELD AVENUEWILLIAM A. DOYLE MGR,?*O'vE 276-C032

ALSO SERVIIiGMOUNTAINSIDE. F ANrt'OOD.

SCOTCH PLAINS ,CL*Hr. f.NSGABWOOD

"The States share of thecost of running our schoolsis pegged at 1172 percentfor next year. " Dr Greeneexplained "This is down 2 ">percent from the currentyear and is very close tu theminimum state aid of 10percent "

Westfield anticipates anincrease in specialeducation aid of more than$200 .(KK> next year "This isdue largely to the funding of 'resource rooms for the ;handicapped which West-field fought (or so valiantly." Dr. Greene noted

He presented a "workingdraft" budge! to the schoolboard Tuesdav nightTaking the cap and Mate aidinto consideration, he notedthat a status quo budgetiwith'an increase to replaceneeded equipment and nodecrease in the textbookpaper and supplies ac-counts1 would be Sis."Oi

: over the state permitted• S699.1S-I increase The: school board will decide on a•• budget to be presented tn the-• public for approval .it the; polls in April The WTV-?.><

school budget is due to the; County Superintendent for

approval by Jan 15

! Dead-EndStreet

(Continued from pioe 1 J

I c a u s e from the neigh-j borhood. Board membersj were p redominan t lyI sympathetic to the! residents' concerns and; recommended that the issue;

be studied by local safety-officials before any action istaken. Any final decisionmust be made by ihe Town ;Council.

: The board alsoregistered its. support for '•extending approval of the ,

i town's new zoning or- •dinance.Mayor Aksxander -

W i l l i a m s cm f e r e djustification for' the ex-

tension by faying that' "there simply wasn't '.• enough time . Its's a big joband we want to do it right."

' he continued.Planning Board Vice- ,

Chairman Joseph Dooley j'. cast the only dissenting vote \• on the extension. "Council j

to act o

board to consider the needfor parking in Westfield. Hecited the availability ofI'nion County block grantfunds. He said that in arecent conference session ofthe Town Council, plans byt h e N e i g h b o r h o o dImprovement Association \by Sorrentos Pizza Central IAve. a parking area were ]discussed. The councilman !asked the Planning Board to IGive parking serious con- jsideration because, "it is the {lifeblood of the business jcommunity in Westfield." |

Board Chairman James jF. Skinner announced that jMonday's meeting markedhis last meeting as achairman and member. Hehas been on the PlanningBoard for some 12 years.

Because of the holiday,the next meeting of theboard will be Jan S.

SteengrafeiContinueafrom paoe I)

Thomas and Walter Judd. jprominent thinkers with ;diverse and stimulating ;points of view of interest to jadult minds. Creativelearning Vacations were '••i n n o v a t e d u n d e r . ;Steengrafe's direction and iincluded a trip to the artist jcolony at Rockport, Me., jand this year will offer a trip '•to Greece to develop oil '.painting techniques. j

New this year, among Ihe |10 or 15 new courses nor- .nially offered each year, is •a weekend at Princeton with ,Dr. John Stroessinger who !will conduct seminars on jHigh Points In History, a :project being conducted in jcooperation with South !Orange • Maplewood • Chat-ham - Madison Adult jSchools. i

Mr. and Mrs. Steengrafe .plan to remain in theirFairmont Ave. home with ;Mr. Steengrafe continuing 'in his real estate activities :with the Meierdierck jAssociates firm in West-field :

On behalf of the Inited Fund of HrstfieM. LindaMaggio. executive director, accepts the annual pledge ofthe Wfsifield Service League to help support the ISmember agencies from Margaret MacPherton,chairman of the donations committee, and Darlene Leh-niann. a member of the committee. Over the past 20years Service League members have beefl responsiblefor IT3.Sg-0 in contributions to the Westfield L'nited Fund.

Overhead Wires. i Com inued from page 1)

presently overhead alongthe railroad right-of-waywill be placed undergrounda nd a proposed substa tion a tRahway Ave will not bebuilt until 1982 or 1383 Thefoundations, which range indepth from 22 (t to 29 ft willbe dug by Mohawk Con-struction Co. Because of thedepths involved, the holeswill have steel sheeting, thedriving of which will be thenoisiest and most disruptivepart of the project It willtake about two weeks to '<complete each hole, with \work starling sometime in ,:

December. The four holes •should be completed some-time in February, weather >permitting ]

Public Service will placethe reinforcing bars andanchors in the holes and willpour the concrete with itsown forces The estimatedtime period (or this work isthree months - March toMay. 1979

The general plan is tohave all 47 poles in the ."•'.-mile project completed bythe end of \vrv and to stringthe wire early in 1980 Thedate set to energize is May l.19K0

HolidayPrograms

(Continued from page 1)

7:45p.m.; Thursday, Dec. 7.Lincoln, 7:45 p.m.: Monday,Dec. 11. Washington, 7:45p.m.: Tuesday, Dec. 12,Grant. 7:45 p.m.; Wed-nesday and Thursday, Dec.13 and 14. Roosevelt JuniorHigh School, 8 p.m.;Wednesday and Thursday,Dec. 13 and 14, EdisonJunior High School. 8 p.m.:Monday, Dec. 18,Tamaques. 7:45 p.m.:Monday. Dec. 18. Franklin.7:45 p.m.: Tuesday, Dec. 19.Wilson, 7:45 p.m.; Wed-nesday, Dec. 20, Senior HighSchool, 8 p.m.; McKinley'sholiday program was heldlast night.

Service League(Continued from page 1)

successful conclusion.The Service League is an

organization of peopledevoting their lime andenergy to see that otherpeople share in the ad-vantage of a town likeWestfield. With this gift,Service League membersare taking their efforts one

step farther by helpinghundreds more that dependon our community's 15major agencies."

Mrs. Maggio stated thatthe league's continuinggenerosity toward theWestfield United Fundrepresents "an importantvote of confidence in theservices of our agenciesbring to the community andthe important role they playin Westfield's ever'y-dayaffairs."

The Service League hasbeen a substantial con-tributor to the past cam-paigns of the United Fund ofWestfield. Mrs. Mary LouPruden. league president,noted, "Our members arewell aware of the financialneeds of the United Fund'smember agencies. Manyare involved in this annualappeal to the communityand we are proud to be ableto help."

Mrs. Pruden said thecontribution was madepossible because the ServiceLeague raised about $30,000last year through its ThriftShop and Consignment Shopfor distribution, and allprofits from the two shops at114 Elmer St. are donated tovarious local charities.

Members of the leaguedonate their time operatingthe two shops. The Con-signment Shop acceptsclothing, crafts andmiscellaneous items onconsignment for sale to thepublic. At the Thrift Shop,all merchandise is donatedand offered for resale atthrifty prices.

"We urge all Westfieldresidents to give theleague's shops the samewonderful support that theLeague members are givingthe community through thiscontribution and the manyothers they make to localcharities," stated LindaMaggio. "The ServiceLeague's gift to the UnitedFund of Westfield trulyexemplifies our slogan of'People Helping People."

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Page 5: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

By Moon LandrieuEditor's Note: This is the fourteenth in a series of 15

articles exploring "Taxation: Myths and Realties." Inthis article, Moon I-andrieu, former Mayor of NewOrleans, discusses the origin and nature of the financialproblems facing big cities and suggests how federal,stale, and local governments can work together to helpsolve these problems. This series was written forCOURSES BY NEWSPAPER, a program developed byUniversity Extension. University of California, SanDiego, and funded by a grant from the NationalEndowment for the Humanities.

Copyright c 1978 by the Regents of the University ofCalifornia.

Most of what civilization has developed is preserved inthe cities of the world. Our cities are invaluable assets,yet we ignored them during most of this country'sexistence.

We can ignore them no longer: many of our majorcities - New York, Cleveland, Boston, New Orleans,-Newark and others - are struggling to escape thepressures of financial problems that have been gainingon them.

The problems have multiplied in the past 30 years asfederal policies contributed to the decline of urban areasand the growth of suburbs. Among the federal programsthat have enabled suburbs to flourish at the expense ofcentral cities were the government's highway and home-loans policies.

As urban critic Ada Louise Huxtable has said, "Thefreeways surrounding our cities guarantee the innercity's demise." Construction of highways enabled peopleto build on cheap land in undeveloped areas and beminutes away from their jobs in central cities.

In addition, government lending policies after WorldWar II favored new housing in emerging areas andneglected inner-city housing and renovation. The middleclass left the inner cities, taking (heir tax dollars withthem. The cities were left with the poor, mainlyminorities and the aging.

Without tax dollars, cities could not provide necessaryservices such as improved health care, frequentsanitation pickups, and street repairs. Neighborhoodsdied from neglect. Cities were still the centers of theirregions, but the regions weren't supporting them.

HISTORICAL ROOTSThe roots of this problem did not appear suddenly 30

years ago. They go back to the very, founding of ourcountry, when power was divided between the federalgovernment and the states. Because we were anagrarian society, cities, such as they were, were totallyomitted from the division of authority. They becamesubordinate to the states, with no meaningful link to the

-THE WESTFtELD (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER I, 1»7*

Myths and Realities XIV:Big Cities: Financial Problems and Solutions

federal governmentCities began taking a more dominant role in the latter

part of the 19th century, but they still lacked thenecessary partnership role with the federal government.Cities had changed, but the governing processesremained the same.

Until the mid-1940's, cities basically were financiallyself-sufficient. They relied for the most part on theproperty tax, limited use of the sales tax, and relativelyrare use of income or earnings taxes. But when thefederal government instigated its post-war highway andlending policies, cities lost their financial self-sufficiency.

FEDERALFUNDINGIn the mid-1960's, cities began their first concerted

efforts to reverse the trend. City officials impressed on.the federal government the fact that its policies weredevastating urban areas. Slowly, the machinery ofgovernment began to change directions.

Money began to flow through the pipeline fromWashington, D.C., to support programs to rebuild neigh-borhoods, help cities maintain basic services, and lowerthe tremendously high unemployment in central cities.

But even this initial flow of funds caused problems. Thefederal government determined on its own, withoutdirect city input, the manner of assistance. The firstfunds were earmarked for specific programs. But no twocities are the same; what helped one city might havebeen of little value to another.

With mayors from all over America converging onCongress and the Administration from 1970-72, Congressfinally passed the General Revenue-Sharing Bill. Insteadof earmarking funds for specific projects, the bill gavecities wide discretion in allocating federal funds.

Although federal funding is now significant - providingan average of 30 percent of the operating budget of majorcities - an adequate restructuring has not occurred. Asgovernment lobbyists, cities are late arrivals. Reversingpolicies that had their beginnings 200 years ago isn'teasy.

Federal assistance will be a necessity for severalyears, but it will not be maintained and expanded in-definitely. Cities and states must regard federalassistance as buying them the time necessary to put theirown financial houses in order.

Putting the house in order, however, does not meansimply raising taxes; taxing, in fact, is part of theproblem.

LOCALTAXESThe sales tax, used as a major source of revenue since

the 1940, hits the poor the hardest. Nor can a city raise itssales tax out of line with that of an adjoining jurisdiction.Because people will shop where taxes are lowest, even ahigher sales tax would cause an inner city to loserevenue.

Resistance to sales tax increases is great. Smallwonder, since the tax is so broadly based.

A member of Congress predicted in 1790, "The timewill come when the poor man will not be able to wash hisshirt without paying a tax." That time has come. Soappowder and washing machines are subject to sales tax inmany local jurisdictions.

Property tare* historically have been the majorsource of revenue for cities, but many states mandate theamount. Louisiana, for example, exempts homes up to150,000 from taxes, thus denying cities there an im-portant source of revenue.

In Newark, a $20,000 home is taxed $1,800. The result,in some cases, is that homeowners abandon theirproperties. They can't afford to live there, and they can'tfind buyers.

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For your beer can collectors we have an excellent supply or new cans -singles or by the case.

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Anyone who believes improved federal policies havesolved the problem of our cities should listen to NewarkMayor Kenneth Gibson, who says: "If the urban crisis isover, no one has told the people in Newark about it."

Cities that have escaped urban decay are those thathad the power of annexation, letting them extend theirboundaries (as Houston did) or become part of ametropolitan government (such as Indianapolis, St.Paul, and Jacksonville).

PROPOSED SOLUTIONThese, then, are the problems. What are the possible

solutions? All of them will take time and a strongnational commitment.

First, states should allow cities to extend theirfinancial boundaries through annexation, formingmetropolitan governments, or levying an earnings tax.

Second, statewide property taxes should be fair andreasonable. Where taxes are mandated low, cities shouldbe allowed a more reasonable return. Where taxes areunreasonably high, they should be lowered, with the stateproviding revenue sharing to make up the difference.

Third, federal policy-makers should reflect on theirown tax situations. The federal government has beencutting its taxes on a regular basis for over 10 years, butcities have been raising theirs - creating a greaterdisparity between cities and suburbs.

Fourth, cities should capitalize on their strongestassets - improve their neighborhoods, central businessdistricts, and shopping centers to encourage a movementback to the inner city. Cities can do this, if they mobilizethe talents and resources of the private sector and theacademic community at the same time they increasetheir own efficiency through improved management.

Finally, there must be a re-analysis of the functionsand responsibilities of federal, state, and local govern-

ments.There must he full recognition that cities are not in-

dependent islands but are an integral and essential partof our government system. Cities need authority fromthe states to govern their own affairs, and financialassistance from the state and federal governments tosupport regional functions that cities are required toperform.

The views expressed in Courses by Newspaper arethose of the authors only and do not necessarily reflectthose of the University of California, the funding agency,or the participating newspapers and colleges.

Next Week: George K. lireak of the University ofCalifornia. lirrkcley, assesses the possibilities ofachieving tax reform.

Honor Student

Judith Walsh, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. William R.Walsh of Cranford Ave., hasbeen named to the KentPlace Middle School honorroll for the first trimester.

Placement on the honorroll indicates that thestudent has maintained anoverall academic average ofB-plus or better for theterm.

Does It AgainAT ^

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r*** THE WESTFIELD (NJ.) LEAJJEK, THURSDAY. OECEMERCB 7, l t »

THEWESTFIELD LEADERASF IU ATI MfMIIR

NATIONAL N l W i f A M I ASSOCIATION

Second e l m pttHA.it paid i t WtstbeM. N.J.PublidttM) Tbund*> At Wesifteld. New Jersey, by l i e Wesi&dd

Lodfx Priatlns wad Pubkihlng Company. An Independent Ncwsptpcx.Official Piper for th* Town of Wttl field tod Botoufh of

Subscription: 16.00 pel y t u ID advance.Eiublubed 1890

Offic* 50 Elm Slnt l . Woibeld. KJ 07090TcL 232-4407 - 232-44O8

MtmbrrQufcbly Wrrklie* of Ntw Jertry

NrM Jen«> Press AssootliooWALTER J. LEE PublisherGAIL W. TRJWBLE EditorHARK D. LOWYNS . . . ." Adt

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7. 1»7«

LETTERS TO THEEDITOR

State Investing toImprove Productivity

A new responsibility was assigned this year to theDivision of Budget and Accounting in the State Depart-ment of the Treasury -- active promotion and develop-ment of a program to increase productivity of all Stateagencies, reports the New Jersey TaxpayersAssociation. Immediate administrative direction is inthe Management Improvement I'nit. The .productivityprogram has been in operation less than a year, duringwhich time each Slate executive department has ap-pointed a department coordinator. An overall in-formation-education program for supervisors and em-ployees has begun, as well as identification of recentproductivity improvements and review of problems withdelivery of central services

To provide "seed" money for the implementation ofcost-saving improvements in Stale Government, thefiscal year 1978-79 State Budget authorized a Produc-tivity Investment Fund of S400.000. Suggestions on how touse this money were solicited from all State agenciesresulting in 84 improvement proposals being submitted.Evaluation of proposals is based on: reasonability of theplan to achieve the stated benefit: ability to implement ina short period time; capability for rapid payback ofinitial investment: favorable ratio of financial returnfrom the initial investment: and unavailability of fund-ing from other sources.

Evaluation of 46 proposals led to selection of six costinga total of $159,108 with estimated savings of about S55.00Oin the first year. $853,000 in the second year, and nearlyW50,000 in' the third, a three-year total savings of$1,357,900.

First productivity improvement projects are:Word processing systems for the Division of Criminal

Justice, $24,208 cost vs. estimated three-year savings of$115,206;

Application of the Rutgers Energy ManagementSystem to two buildings. S14.(O0 cost vs. S82.000 savingsover three years:

Installation of 20 intruder alarm transmitters atGlassboro State College, cost of'$14,000 with three-yearsavings of $27,000;

Installation of an automobile diagnostic device in theCentral Motor Pool inspection station. $15,900 cost andthree-year savings of S133.7O0;

Installation of sophisticated licensing documentprocessors in the Division of Motor Vehicles. $35,000investment compared with S500.000 savings by end of thethird year;

Travel and related expenses to conduct out-of-Stateaudit of five corporations by the Division of Taxation,$20,000 outlay for a $500,000 saving.

In the months ahead the productivity program willcontinue with the Improvement Unit providingassistance to agencies in developing and planning im-provements, presenting instructional sessions,disseminating materials on techniques for improvingproductivity: studying further improvement of servicesby cental service agencies, and investing additionalmonies from the Productivity Improvement Fund inprojects proposed by operating units.

Employee cooperation and participation are essentialto the success of efforts (o improve the efficiency ofgovernment operations. Significant progress can bemade if all employees understand thai productivity gainsare one method of controlling inflation.

Revenue DedicationQuestionable Fiscal Policy

In November 1976. New Jersey voters approved areferendum question authorizing casino gambling forAtlantic City. The constitutional amendmen! questionalso included a provision for dedicating the revenue thatwas realized by the Stale from casino licenses and the 8percent tax on gross gambling revenue for "reductions inproperty taxes, rentals, telephones, gas. electric, andmunicipal utilities charges of eligible senior citizens anddisabled residents of the State, in accordance with suchformulae as the Legislature shall by law provide".

On the same election day ballot was anotherreferendum for a constitutional amendment requiringdedication of personal income taxes to "counties.municipalities and school districts...exclusively for thepurpose of reducing or offsetting property taxes".

No legislation providing for spending the revenue fromthe casinos was introduced in the pre-casino period, norwere any specific formulae discussed in relation to theamendment. There has been subsequent legislativeconsideration of life-line (utilityi payments as adesirable way to utilize the gambling tax and licenserevenue.

The Pharmaceutical Assistance to the Aged Program(PAA), a prescription drug program for senior citizensoriginally enacted by the Legislature in 1968. andmodified in 1975 and 1977 has developed lo be much moreexpensive than earlier anticipated. Many more par-ticipants have enrolled in the program than werebudgeted for in fiscal 1979 threatening the presentprecarious 1978-79 budget balance.

Accordingly, the Legislature has been seeking ways tofind more money to continue the program. One methodsuggested is use" of gambling revenues lo fund the PA.Aprogram since the intent of gambling revenues is toassist senior citizens Recently Senate and AssemblyConcurrent Resolutions were introduced to change theconstitutional casino revenue dedication to include"pharmaceutical assistance and other programsbenefiting eligible senior citizens and disabled residentsof the State..."

Such a constitutional change could not be submitted tothe voters until the November 1979 general election.Constitutional dedication of revenue has thus created aproblem which cannot be quickly solved. There areexamples of revenue dedication creating serious budgetbalancing problems in other states. Aid programs paidfor out of New Jersey's Property Tax Relief < personalincome tax) Fund are being financed in part from othertaxes in the General State Fund because the income taxhas not produced as much as was anticipated. The NewJersey Taxpayers Association since 1947 has opposedconstitutional revenue dedication because it reduced thespending discretion of elected officials in key fiscalmatters. NJTA suggests it would be sounder fiscalpolicy if the dedication section for casino revenues wererepealed instead of expanded.

All letters to the editormusl bear a signature, astreet address and atelephone number soauthors may be checked If

j contributors are not able tobe reached at local phonenumbers during Leaderbusiness hours. thewriter's signature may benotarized

Letters must be writtenonly on one side of paperand typewritten

All letters must be in the"Leader ' office by Fridayif they are to appear in thefollowing issue

Life In The Suburbs By Al Smith

CANCER SCHKF.MMi

Editor Leader:On Dec 14 at 7:30 p.m..

Railway Hospital. incooperation with severallocal boards of health, isagain offering a screeningprogram for Colon-RectalCancer. There wil I be a brieflecture by a physicianfollowed hy a question andanswer period Tesl kits willhe distributed which par-ticipants can use in theprivacy of their homes.

This'screeninj: test is easylo use. painless and is anextremely imporlant toolfor early diagnosis.

Colon-Rectal Cancer hasthe second highest mortalityrate among cancer casesI'nlike some forms ofcancer, however, it isamenable to treatment ifdiscovered early

This program was offeredon June 21. 1978 but was notwell attended. An hour ortwo of your time onDecember nth could be a"life-saver."

Joseph J. MotlleyHealth Officer

Healthy EatingThe Trailside Nature and

Science Center. incooperation with Blue Crossof New Jersey, will presenta free film series on health-ful eating. •"MeatlessMenus." "New Ways withChicken." and "Low FatMeat Preparation" will beshown at 10 a.m. Saturday inthe Trailside auditorium

C-CORN, THIRTY SIX-- ,MILK. FORTY NINE, ] |

Rl DE,TWENTy CENTS.'

Congressman

.MATT RINALOO

The way the dollar hasbeen battered and devaluedover recent months againstthe German mark, theJapanese yen and even theItalian Lira provides anominous signal of sippingU.S. leadership in in-ternational economicfairs.

The creation of abillion special fundforeign currencies to

baling inflation has done jlittle, if anything, lo restore |confidence on tht> in- iternational scene ;

It has to be realized that ;we live in an increasingly iintegrated world Our 'massive economy is now :directly influenced by ex- !

ternal events • a factorS30 ] emphasized by recentof j reports of the Council on:

buv i National Securitv and

very cooperative in clearingaway trading barriers.

The timing is right. Thefact that the U.S. dollar hasdeclined sharply on in-ternational exchangemarkets makes Americanproducts more of a bargainto overseas buyers.Congress and the Presidentmust develop trade and taxincentives to encouragemore U.S. companies tostart selling their productsabroad.

Monthly Benefits Significant

To Decisions on RetirementIn deciding w hether or not

to retire, the fact that thesocial security check you'vegot coming may be gettingbigger because of the delaymay or may not besignificant, depending onone's circumstances.

The 1977 social securityamendments increased theamount of special credits forpeople w ho delay retirementafter age 65 to 1 to 3 percentfor each year after age 65starting with 1982. Thus, aperson who retires at age 68would find his or her socialsecurity check 9 percenthigher than it would havebeen otherwise.

The law was also changedto make such credits ap-plicable to widow's orwidower's benefits at Ihedeath of a worker starting inJune 1978

While it is true thatdelayed retirement creditswill not generally be thepivot upon which theretirement decision willturn, it is also true thatwhere the decision is close,the propsect of a biggercheck in the future could tipthe scales in favor ofpostponement.

af-

dollars for exchange inforeign money markets willhelp assure that the price ofthe dollar will not dipprecipitously while the fundlasts. This will buy moretime to work out an anti-flation program that canassure a more stabilizedcurrents'.

The decline of the dollaron the world market stemsin large measure fromconfusion and concern athome and abroad about ournation's economic policy.International businessmenfear that we may take off onanother trip down Ihe ex-pansionary trail leading loeven more inflation, soaringtaxes, higher costs andskyrocketing interest rates

President Carter's accenton voluntary cooperation asthe hopeful key to com-

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STARSCOPEby Clare Anmwell

• * —

WEEK BEGINNING DECEMBER 7,1978

AQUARIUS — J»nu»ry 21-Februiry 1»Friends make this a memorable week, highlighted by afeeling of tnie togetherness. Some complicated questionssurface around ihe weekend; don't look for pat answers.

PISCES — Febnury 20 - March 20Until Sunday you feel you've been putting your foot downso often, you should have been a tap dancer. Then the pic-ture — especially the financial picture — turns sunnier.

ARIES — March 21 • April 20No pattern this week — take each day as il falls. Familyproblem peaks around Tuesday, then manages to solveitself. Romantic worries begin to diminish Recreation fa-vored on weekend.

TAURUS-April 21-May 22You're the popular choice this week — especially w hen thebuck is being passed around. Good chance lo be a winnerduring the weekend. Wining and dining makes mood soar.

GEMINI-M«y 23-June 21Week focuses on investment — especially investment oftime. Ordinary jobs lake much longer — but ihe hours arerewarded. Hectic but happy weekend. Romance springsforw ard after brief setback.

CANCER — June 22 - July 22It's a mobile week, favoring travels, moves and lots of er-rands. Before sending off important papers, check thatyou've kept a copy. Romantic partner seems a little coynow.

LEO — July 23 - August 22The power of positive thinking takes you places all week.Old acquaintances may show up in town. Relaxingweekend proves pleasant balance to busy weekdays.Make 'trust' your keyword.

VIRGO — Auput 23 - Septero ber 22Don't take relationships for granted — this is not the weekfor coasting. No one need tell you that Virgo's motto is ser-vice. Monday-Wednesday finds partner in playful mood.

LIBRA — September 23 - October 22Entertaining, peacemaking and spending all fit in withweek's -'-"• There's a charming social evening, a feudsolved with Libra flair, and an uncontrollable yen to shopall weekend.

SCORPIO — October 23 - November 21Expect some rivalry from a friend or associate before theweekend. Days have the feel of a comedy of errors — withmixed up appointments and financial misunderstanding.

SAGITTARIUS — November 22 - December 22Thursday-Friday find you perplexed because you'reworking so hard but achieving little. In financialundertakings, read tiniest print. In romance, interpretminute gestures as major love signs.

CAPRICORN — December 23 - January 20Clouded issues become clear around weekend and it's theright time to make key decisions. Some nagging can getyour Capricorn goat. You're something of a sleuth star-ting Monday.

BIRTHDAY THIS WEEKYou're high-powered, light-hearted, and kindness itself.And you're also frank — to a fault. A little more tact, a lit-tle more patience, and romance can bloom come spring.Key business decision around the fall can affect thefuture.

BORN THIS WEEKDecember 7th. architect Giovanni Bernini; «tn. Mary.Queen of Scots: 9th, aclor Broderick Crawford; 10th. poetEmily Dickinson: Illh. actor Victor McLaglen: 12th. OldBlue Eyes Frank Sinatra: 13th. journalist Drew Pearson.

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International Affairs. iUnfor tunate ly . the •

development and im- 'plementation of government jpolicies related lo in- <ternational economic int- icrests have not kept pace :with the swift march ofworld economic progress. •

Since 1958. the U.S. jbalance of payment deficits Ihas been eroding our jmonetary assets as other Inations become glutted jwith dollar reserves. The iSmithsonian Agreement in1971 for a multilateralshuffling of national • ;currencies realigned the jdollar, but this change jreflected only previous Idevelopments. The dollar jwas strengthened, however, |

; recouping all of tho "semi- :I devaluation." i ;i But a massive* trade i

deficit in 1977 - continuing •into 1978 • combined with [increasing f.S. reliance on 'OPEC oil supplies, sparkeda serious new erosion of ;confidence in the I'.S.economy. The result hasmade headlines withstartling declines in Ihevalue of the dollar on in-ternational money marketsduring recent months.

Because of the U.S.government's failure toadopt sound fiscal policies

] at home and on Ihe in-j ternational scene, ourj economy is now overlyj influenced by economicpolicies abroad.

The result is that theworking American man andwoman suffer as oureconomy is weskened byactions taken abroad.

What musl be done to! reverse this situation and| restore the U.S. to its in-! ternational leadership on' the economic front?

First, we need to gel in-flation under control byreducing governmentspending and makinggovernment more efficient.

Second, we need policieswhich will make the U.S.less dependent on foreign oiland give our own energyproducers an opportunity toexpand domestic energyresources.

Along with these changes.Congress and the Presidentmust do more lo encourageU.S. exports. Americansshould take a lesson fromthe German and Japaneseeconomic recovery fromWorld War II by launchingthe biggest export drive theworld has ever seen.

New Jersey would be amajor beneficiary of a sharpincrease in exports sinceone out of every five jobs inthe New York-New Jerseymetropolitan area is linkedto world trade. In addition,one of the major centers forexporting autos would bePort Elizabeth, the largestcontainer port in the world.

The port has alreadyexperienced an increase injobs and traffic as a result ofsharply rising exports ofU.S. made cars in Germany.Never before has the•usurious U.S. auto been soaffordable to West Germanyand Japanese buyers. Westill have not had muchsuccess in penetrating theJapanese market, but atleast the Germans are being

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point

Social Security studiesshow that money is thebiggest single factor af-fecting the decision whetherto retire. To this extenl. theperson who delaysretirement will also findthat af ler reaching 65 he canearn more and still keep allof his social securitybenefits.

Here's how it works. For1978. people under 65 canearn up to $3,240 withoutaffecting their socialsecurity checks, but afterreaching age 65 they canearn up to $4,000 withoutaffecting benefits.

The annual exemptamount for people age 65and over is scheduled to goup S500 each year for thenext Ihree years, andthereafter increase with

I increases in wage levels.For people who retire beforeage 65. the exempt amountwill increase with wagelevels, a somewhat lowerrate of increase.

'• In 1982 the age at whichthe retirement test no longerapplies will drop from 72 to70. enabling people 70 orolder who want to work toearn as much as they canwithout affecting theirsocial security checks.

As under the old law, anyearnings over the annualexempt amounl cause areduction in the socialsecurity check of $1 for each

I $2 in earnings above the

exempt amount.People most likely to be

influenced by the prospectof a more comfortable socialsecurity arrangement arethose who are already in-clined to put off retirementas long as possible - the self-employed and professionalswho are not under thepressure of mandatoryretirement as are manywage earners. At the sametime, low earners who feelthat they cannot afford loretire just yet may fine thatthese provisions makeretirement more feasible.

For example, benefits areactuarially reduced for aperson who retires at age 62to reflect the longer periodover which they will bereceiving them. And underthe new law. where there isa permanent reduction inbenefits, no retroactivepayments are generallypossible. Such retroactivebenefits were possible bydating Ihe start of benefitsback for up to 12 months.Now this rule applies only topeople who retire after age65.

Such incentives for laterretirement are not likely tomake a difference to mostpeople. But for those they doaffect, it can mean awelcome addition toeconomic security afterthey retire - when they mostneed it.

Exhibit Opens At GalleryAn exhibit of new pain-

tings by Theodoros Stamosis featured in the TomasuloGallery at Union College inDecember.

The exhibit will continuethrough Dec. 23.

The nine paintings onexhibit, all acrylic on

canvas, represent Stamos'newest pieces in the"Infinity Field LefkadaSeries." Known as first-generation abstract ex-pressionist, Stamos' latestseries is a continuation ofhis involvement with ab-stract color field painting.

I EGG \1RS0rV WOOD WRLKERINCORPORATED

l/e-ncpis 'Ji'A >;.'« Sio(« E>;''.ma,> i-v

203 Elm Street, Westfield

232-2686Open Thursday Evenings, 7-9 P.M.

Rise & ShineJust in TimeFor Christmas

From State O'Maine, the plush Arnel orCotton Velour Shave 'n1 Shower Coats.When it's time to rise, he'll shine.

In cheerful colors to brighteneven a gloomy day. Navy, Coffee,

Burgundy, Forest, Rust,Yellow...from $35.

OPEN MON. and THURS. til 9 P.M.REGULA RL Y 9:30 to 5:30

MAJOR CREDIT CARDS A CCEPTED

256 EAST BROAD STREETWESTFIELD, NEW JERSEY

232-7900

Page 7: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Walter Eckhart of Hestfield makes his contribution toTag Day, sponsored by Hie Junior Auxiliary to Children'sSpecialized Hospital in Mountainside. Accepting hiscontribution are Patrice Camillo, right, president of thegroup, and Erin O'Donnell, Tag Day Chairman. Tag Daywill be held Friday, Dec. 15, and Saturday, Dec. 16, inWeslfield.

Jr. Aux. Tag Day ApproachesThe Junior Auxiliary of

Children's SpecializedHospital will hold its annualTag Day this year onFriday, Dec. 15, andSaturday, Dec. 16. it wasannounced this week.

The Junior Auxiliary,which does volunteer workat the rehabilitation hospitalas well as raising money,will use the proceeds of thisyear's Tag Day to offsetexpenses incurred on a tripto Washington, D.C., by fourphysically handicappedpersons. The trip was a pilotproject sponsored by thehospital to prove to thehandicapped they can getaround and enjoy a numberof recreational activities.

despite their handicaps.On Dec. 15, members of

the Junior Auxiliary will beat the train station inWestfield for Tag Day from6-8 a.m. and in the shoppingareas on Dec. 16 from 9 a.m.to 3 p.m.

The new officers of theauxiliary unit are PatriceCamillo, president; EllenKalbacher, vice-president;Melissa Devalon, recordingsecretary; Elise Devideo,corresponding secretary,and Ann Clark, treasurer.

The advisors to the groupare Mrs. J.J. Camillo andMrs. William Cunnick. Anyinterested girls in grades 9-12 are invited to join thegroup.

Cats, Cats and More Cats - Every student in BeechwoodSchool, Mountainside, contributed a cat (a paperrepresentation) for this ••Millions of Cats" bulletinboard, commemorating a favorite children's readingselection for fifty years and also highlighting AmericanBook Week. Shown adding cats to the display are EricRauschenberger, Paul Ililse, and Gray son Murray.

Concert at Library SundayThe Long Hill Consort, a small group of amateur

musicians, will give a concert of Medieval andRenaissance music at 3 p.m. Sunday at the WestfieldMemorial Library.

Enthusiasm, variety, and wide chronological rangeof musical interests characterize the playing of theLong Hill Consort, whose members are active in theSomerset Hills Chapter of the American RecorderSociety. Coached by Mrs. Phoebe Larkey, member ofthe Early Music Players of New Jersey, the Long HillConsort performs on contemporary replicas of earlyinstruments, such as Renaissance and Baroquerecorders, krummhorns, viola de gamba and per-cussion.

This free performance presented by the Friends ofthe Westfield Memorial Library is open to the public.Refreshments will be served.

Local Attorney NamedTo Federal Post

Lawrence 1. Lerner, aWestfield attorney and aresident of Springfield, hasbeen appointed to the ad-visory committee of the In-dustrial Innovation Coor-dinating Committee byJuanita M. Kreps, U.S.Secretary of Commerce.

The committee wasnamed by the Secretary ofCommerce to assist thePresident and the Com-merce Department in theeffort to help reverse theincreasing share of UnitedStates patents which arebeing received by foreigninventors, particularly by jindividuals from Japan andWest Germany, Lerner said.

"I am pleased by this ap-pointment and anxious toassist my government withthis increasingly complexproblem," Lemer continued."The United States has thetechnology and the genius todevelop many of the in-ventions for which foreigninventors are receivingpatents in this country. Thiscommittee will work toinsure that the full range ofgovernment assistance ismade available to inventorsin both the private andpublic sectors."

According to HarryPappas, chairman of theUnion County DemocraticCommittee, "Mr. Lerner'sappointment marks a first,in recent years, for UnionCounty and our Party.Working with RichardSamuel, a National Com-mitteeman from NewJersey, we achieved theresult in cooperation withMs. Anne Wexler, Special

Patients and (heirfamilies can learn a lot fromone another. And the nur-sing staff of the AmbulatoryHealth Care Center ofMuhlenberg Hospital,Plainfield, has developed aseries of patient educationprograms designed tocapitalize on this exchangeof information betweenpatients and educators.Mrs. Joyce Long, R.N., headnurse of the AmbulatoryHealth Care Center, hasprepared an extensivecalendar of educationalprograms which involveparents in group sessionsdesigned to promote healthylifestyles and practices.

The classes cover topicsranging from the prenatalexperience to dental careand hypertension. Classesare offered free toAmbulatory Health CareCenter patients and theirfamilies.

On Mondays and Fridays,the staff conducts "PEP," aPed ia t r i c Educat ionProgram, with classescovering topics relating toinfant and child .care. Someof the classes offered in-clude: how to take tem-peratures and fever care,childhood diseases andimmunization, infantfeeding and communication,safety measures and a childdevelopment rap session.

Prenatal classes areconducted on Tuesdays.Prenatal clinic patients areencouraged to attend theseclasses, and after com-pleting five sessions areRiven a-certificate and alittle gift for their involve-ment. During the sessions,expectant mothers and theirhusbands explore topicssuch as prenatal feelings,labor and delivery, postpartum feelings and familyplanning. Patients are givena tour of the hospital's postpartum unit which allowsthem to become familiarwith the setting.

"During our prenatalclasses we ask each patientto identify herself, tell thegroup what month of herpregnancy she is in and ifshe has any other children.This helps give the woman afeeling for what otherpatients are experiencing ,

Patients ExchangeProblems at Programs

and some of the things theythemselves can expect."Mrs. Long explained. "Wealso encourage husbands toattend the prenatal classesso we can discuss parentingand other feelings related tochild rearing. Everythingaround us says pregnancyand child rearing arenatural, but when it comesto raising a child, one findsthings aren't necessarily sonatural," she pointed out."Methods of bringing up achild, discipline and reasonsfor discipline all need to bedeveloped."

A variety of classes areoffered to patients on Wed-nesdays. Classes forprenatal registration,gynecological classes whichcover the procedure in-volved in pelvicexaminations, and concernsand problems peculiar tofemales are conducted onWednesdays along with twopart informational series onhypertension given in theafternoon. Classes on dentalcare for adults and children,breast self-examination andthe Do's and Don'ts ofmedicine are presented onThursdays.

"Some classes involvefilm strips, tours or hand-out literature." Mrs. Longsaid, "but primarily theclasses are lectures and rapsessions." She continued,"To find out what topics areof concern and interest toour patients, we requesttheir feed back to give usdirection in updating andstructuring the classes."For example, the classes onparenting and sharingfeelings were developed inresponse to a demonstratedpatient need and interest inthese topics.

The 12 member AHCCnursing staff is enthusiasticabout the program. Staffmembers from thehospital's Department ofNutrition help conduct thesessions on hypertensionand diabetes.

The educational programsoffered by the AHCC staffwere initiated to further thecause of providing qualityhealth care to patients andarea residents. "Educationin health care is so needed,"Mrs. Long said, "and theAHCC is the ideal setting foreducating patients and theirfamilies."

Victorian ChristmasAt Newark Museum

Traditional holidaydecorations in the height ofVictorian style will be onview as the NewarkMuseum's Ballantine Houserestoration is decorated forthe holidays. Through Jan.8. "Christmas in theBallantine House" will treatvisitors to the experience ofn lavish turn-of-the-centuryholiday.

Like every other aspect ofVictorian life, holidays weretreated as a high art, andChristmas was no ex-ception. Mantelpieces ineach room of the BallantineHouse are festooned withevergreen gar lands ,poinsettias. creche figurinesand silk-wrapped fruits.

In the drawing room,handmade antique paperand glass ornaments hangon a tree that is surroundedby children's toys andgames of the period. TheDining Room table is set for

an elegant eight-courseholiday family dinner, andthe staircase in the MainHall is garlanded ingreenery.Newthisseason is a specialexhibition of Victorian dolls,toys and miniature furniturein the Ballantine HouseMusic Room gallery.

The Ballantine House,which was built in 1885 asthe elegant home of John E.Ballantine, president of thebrewery, was restored as aBicentennial project of theNewark Museum. The fivefirst floor rooms are fur-nished in the spirit of thelate-Victorian period, andare open to the public everyday from noon to 5 p.m.

The Newark Museum islocated at 49 Washington St.in downtown Newark, withparking available in theadjacent lot at the corner DfUniversity and CentralAvenues. Admission is free.

Assistant to the Presidentand the Office ofPresidential Personnel.Lerner's more than eighteenyears of experience as apatent attorney helped earnhim a place on thePresidentially nominatedpanel."

The 43-year old Lerner is apartner in the Weslfield lawfirm of Lerner, David,Littenberg and Samuel, thelargest patent law firm inNew Jersey. He also is agraduate of Newark Collegeof Engineering and theGeorgetown University LawSchool.

He is a past president ofthe New Jersey Patent LawAssociation, and past chair-man of the New Jersey BarAssociation's section onp a t e n t , t r a d e m a r k ,copyright, and unfaircompetition law.

Active in many civic andpolitical groups, Lerner andhis wife, the former BeverlyRothstein, are the parents offour children.

Jack Aipaugh. paut president of the Exchange Club ofWestfield, at right, receives 1978 "EDIT" award fromN'ew Jersey District President Howard Gay.

Exchangite Aipaugh is HonoredAt a meeting held last

week at the MountainsideInn, Jack Aipaugh, pastpresident of the ExchangeClub of Westfield waspresented with the 197S"Edit Award" by NewJersey District PresidentHoward Gray. Presidentalso was New JerseyDistrict Director S. ClarkLum.

Judged by a panel fromthe national organization."The New JerseyExchangite" was awardedfirst place in the individualcategories of national news,promotion, writing quality,layout and eye appeal

Aipaugh has served asEditor of the N'ew JerseyExchangite since 1975, ispast president of the Wesl-field Exchange Club, andserved as New Jerseydistrict director in 1974 and

1975.T h e N a t i o n a l

Organization of Exchangecelebrates its 67th anni-versary this year. Formedby a group of business andprofessional men whorecognized that united effortand group communicationof ideas would benefit notonly themselves but their -communities, they in-stituted an expansioncampaign that has resultedin a membership of ap-proximately 50,000, withmore than 2,000 individualclubs. The Westfield Clubwas chartered in 1949.Because the movement isentirely American in con-cept and purpose, clubs arechartered only in U.S.territory. For that reasonthe organization is con-sidered the largest ex-clusively American serviceclub in the country.

-THE WESTFIELD (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 7, 197» Pace 7

RELO Sponsoring TV Yule SpecialRELO- Inter-City Relo-

cation Service will sponsor a30-minute NBC networkholiday special, "The BearWho Slept ThroughChristmas," Henry L. Sch-wiering, vice president ofAlan Johnston, Inc. the localmember of the internationalrelocation service revealed.

"This animated cartoonspecial to be aired on morethan 220 NBC-TV stationsnationally will be seen onNBC-TV, Channel 4 at 8p.m., Tuesday, Dec. 19,"Schwiering explained.

"This is an all familyprogram which will enthrall

Ex-WestfielderDirects ProgramApplications for the

spring term of DrewUniversity's ContinuingEducation for Womenprogram are now availableto residents of Westfield.Director of the program isformer Westfielder JaneNewman.

Both women and meninterested in earning creditstoward a college degree cantake advantage of theprogram's non-traditionaladmissions procedures,which include pre-admissions counselling, anda special orientationplanned for Friday, Jan. 26,prior to the opening of theterm on Jan. 29.

A number of supportiveservices and special fieldwork and "retroactive"credit provisions, intendedto meet the needs ofreturning adults with busyschedules, have been builtinto Drew's CEW program,to give students maximumflexibility in meeting courseand degree requirements.

the young in heart," staledSchwiering. "We are proudto be a sponsor of this highcalibre family entertain-ment and see it as ourChristmas present to ourmany friends in the West-field area.

"The program tells thedelightful story of TedEdward Bear, who decidednot to hibernate, but ratherwants to learn what Christ-mas is all about," Sch-wiering explained. "Ted E.encounters many unusualexperiences in his lonelytrip to the big city, findinghimself locked into adarkened department store.Frightened and very un-certain, he encounters SantaClaus who explains thatChristmas is in the heartand then sends Ted E. to thehome of a little boy and girl.Ted E. finds his way to thehome, where at midnight onChristmas Eve, the littlechildren find him undertheir tree. All ends happily,as Ted E. Bear, havingfound the true meaning ofChristmas, falls asleep inthe little girl's loving arms.

" The Bear Who SleptThrough Christmas' isquality holiday viewingfare," stated Schwiering."The cast members (TomSmothers, Barbara Feldonand Arte Johnson) whonarrate this fun-filled pro-gram are outstanding intheir roles.

"We here at Alan John-ston, Inc. take special pridein joining with more than1.100 fellow independentHELO members across thecountry in more than 10,000communities in bringingthis fine holiday treat to thenation's viewers. We RELObrokers are committed, asmembers of the world'soldest and leading non-profit, broker-owned andoperated residential realestate service, to provideno-cost. no-obligationassistance and relocationservices to transfereefamilies in relocating fromcity to city. This sponsorshipof "The Bear Who SleptThrough Christmas' is ourspecial way of thanking ourmany friends for the op-portunity to assist them."

For Gracious DiningTHF

HALFWAY HOUSEopen 7 days a week

LUNCHEON-COCKTAILS-DINNER• Rt. 22, Eastbound, Mountainside_

Your Hosts-Sick Manukas, John Panai

PHONE.

132-3171f^rr^rffj^if^yy

. < ' "%.-,**-..

• V V

On Thursday, December 14 th

Santa will visitLincoln Federal(you should,toor)Santa will be at Lincoln's Westfield Office,and he'll have a FREE G IFfor every child (accompanied by an adult!)Bring your children for a traditional visit with jolly old Santa atLincoln's Westfield office only. An'd don't forget your camera— pictures of the little ones on Santa's lap make for somereally great memories.

SANTA'S HOURSDec. 14th through Dec. 20th, 1 to 4 pmDec. 14th (Thursday evening), 6 to 8 pmAt Lincoln's Westfield office only

Around the corner.. . across the state

Wesffield: One Lincoln PlozaOrher Offices in: Monmourh, Morris. Ocean, Somerset and Union Counties

, . ;..,,i"l:.:',.ir^' .:•

Page 8: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

F«(« S THE WESTFUXD (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1»W-

DON'T LET IT GO UP IN SMOKENobody's putting down merriment. It's part of the holidays:

happy hearts . . . high spirits . . . good cheer belong to the

Christmas season.. But fire? That's something else.

And there's nothing jolly about it!

Things you can do to help prevent fire in your home -

Keep attic, basement and allyour home free of debris. Besure heating and wiring systemsare in safe condition. HandleHammables with caution . . .be careful with fire in anyform.

Check indoor wreaths andgreens for dryness frequently.

Keep fireplaces and flues

clean. Don't burn wrappings

in ths fireplace and don't

overload with logs.

If using artificial logs, don'tpoke them—or put too manyon at once • or leave themunprotected in fireplace, dueto the nature of the materialsused. Use only in approvedfireplaces. Be sure to readthe directions on the package.

About Christmas trees-keeplive trees away from candles, TV sets,open flames. Set up tree in sturdy, nontip stand containing water-ond keep itfilled. When water absorption stops-discard,the tree. Check lights for loosesockets and worn wires.

Buying an artificial tree? If metaliic,don't hang lights on that tree. If plastic,check for fire-retardant label*

When retiring or going out . . . UNPLUG

your lighting. Use extension cords very

sparingly . . . don't place cords near foot

traffic, under rugs or through doorways.

Do you have a SMOKE DETECTOR?If not, why not? It could saveyour life for a low cost.

Prevention is always your best protection against fire.

THIS MESSAGE SPONSORED BY

WESTFIELD ASSOCIATION OFINDEPENDENT INSURANCE AGENTS

Mtmbtr Of National, Slat* And County AMotiatlon Of ln»urorw« Aganti

A L LFIRE HAZARDS

PEARSALL & FRANKENBACH, INC.

BARRETT ft PARKER, INC.

S.M. KOOKOCEY ft SON

RUSSELL FREEMAN AGENCY

BRAUNSDORF ASSOCIATES, INC.

THE PAKENHAM AGENCY

H. CLAY FRIEDRICHS, INC.

THE DUGHI AGENCY

Page 9: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Exhibit to Trace History of Christmas TreeThe history of the

Christmas tree, from itssimple origin in the MiddleAges to the heyday ofdecoration in the Victorianperiod, will be featured in anexhibit opening at theNewark Museum on Dec. 9."From Saturn to Scrooge,The History of the Christ-mas Tree" will be on displayin the Community Gallerythrough Jan. 8.

Among the 12 live treesdecorated with appropriate.ornaments is a Roman pre-

Christian "Saturnalia"festival tree adorned withcandles. A tree from aMedieval Mystery Play, orreligious drama, isdecorated with apples.

The example of the firstprivate Christmas tree fromthe 17th century is coveredwith candles, paper roses,cookies, candies and goldenapples. An Italian pyramidhas rectangular shelvesarranged with 18th centuryNativity creche figures anddecorated with greens.

One of two large lale-19thcentury Victorian trees isfestooned with elaboratepurchased ornaments, whilethe other is covered with avariety of homemadedecorations such as popcornand cranberry garlands andpaper cutouts. There is alsoa miniature table tree fromthe early 19lh century.

P h o t o g r a p h s anddrawings throughout theexhibit explain the mysteryand fascination of greeneryduring each period. "From

Saturn to Scrooge, TheHistory of the ChristmasTree" has been madepossible through the gift ofMrs. Thelma Dear, inmemory of Leonard andAlice R. Dreyfuss.

The Newark Museum islocated at 49 Washington St.in downtown Newark. Themuseum, which is openevery day from noon to 5p.m., will be closed on Dec.25 and Jan. 1. Admission isfree.

-THE WESTFIELD (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER T, 1978 **& •

More Federal Funds for CountyComputer calculations re-

leased today by Rep.Matthew J. Rinaldo, R-N.J.,show that Union Countystands to gain more than$300,000 in additional federalrevenue sharing underprovisions of legislationscheduled for a vote in theHouse of Representatives.

The bill would extend thecountercyclical revenuesharing program for twoyears and establish asupplementary aid program

for communities withunemployment rates abovethe national average.

Rinaldo said the bill,which was passed in theSenate, would provide atotal of $334,837 for the 12thCongressional district. Thebreakdown of fundingshows $111,539 going to Un-ion County government;$137,087 to Elizabeth;$67,088 to Plainfield. and$19,123 to Rahway. Com-munity level joblessness

rates figure prominently inthe way funds would bedistributed.

New Jersey would receive$25.6 million in federalrevenue sharing under theprogram in fiscal 1979 and$15.« million in fiscal 1980While the statewide total isexpected to decline in thesecond year, Union County'sshare would increase ••rising from $3:14.837 to$339,813.

Carolee Hitter concentrates on S.A.R.I. sheet 10.3.2.,on the reading rug in Mrs. Doris Perego's 6-1 class atLincoln School.

Regional Board In Budget TalksThe Union County

Regional High SchoolDistrict No. 1 will continueits budget discussion at 8p.m. Monday at the Keyes,Martin Building. 841Mountain Ave., Springfield.

In addition, the Board of

Education will meet inadjourned regular session at8 p.m. Tuesday at theJonathan Dayton RegionalHigh School, InstructionalMedia Center, inSpringfield.

VisitSanta and his elves

atMurray Hill Square

every Saturday until ChristmasSanta will be giving out gifts

to all good little boys and girls.

Bring your camera to tike a picture

And be sure to mail aSantagram in Santa's mailbox

In the lower courtyard

Floral Avenue, Murray Hill

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Page 10: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

M THE WESTFUXJ* <NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBEB 7, 1978-

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Corrections Dept. BlamedFor Inadequate County Jails

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The State Department ofCorrections was blamedtoday for failing to use itspowers to correct sub-standard conditions in thecounty jails.

Unwillingness of the DOCto use its regulatory powersto correct abuses anddeficiencies was a majorconclusion of a report issuedby a subcommittee of theAssembly County Govern-ment Committee which hasbeen studying the jailproblem for the last eightmonths.

Assemblyman ChuchHardwick of WeslfieJd <R-Union- was appointed tochair the sub committee byAssemblyman Paul J.Contillo (D-Bergen).

The report called on theDOC to:

4-"actively" use thepowers it now has to directchange where substandardconditions exist

-(-"immediately" setprecise standards foroperating the state's 27county jails

4-tobar county jails withperistently substandardconditions from accepting

Print CompetitionMonday EveningThe Cranford Camera

Club will host the New-Jersey Federation ofCamera Clubs at its secondblack and white and colorcompetition at 8 p.m.Monday at the CranfordRecreation Center.

All New Jersey cameraclub members of theFederation are qualified tosubmit prints.

Judges for the com-petition are Mr. AndyRibaudo of Bricktown. JackSonatore of Fords and Alstoeckert of Bridgewater.

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new prisoners. The cost ofhousing the inmateselsewhere would be chargedto the recalcitrant county.

The DOC was sharplycriticized in the report forfailing to set standards forthe county jails and insistingthey be followed.

The power to prohibitacceptance of new prisonerswould be invoked after a"willful and continuousdisregard of standards."

"The subcommittee in-tends to monitor the DOC'sp e r f o r m a n c e inpromulgating and enforcingstandards ," Hardwickemphasized. "If theDepartment doesn't act. thelegislature will draft lawsrequiring the DOC to set andenforce them."

Seven recommendationswere included in the reportissued today. The sub-committee also recom-mended that:

+The DOC examine theneed to issue bonds tofinance aid to counties forconstruction, renovationand improvement ofinadequate facilities in thecounty jails.

-t-The Freeholder boardsexercise their responsibilityto take control of jails whenabuses warrant it.

+Thelegislature examine

local decisions on humarights apply to county jails.

While the subcommitteestopped short of draftingactual standards, it pin-pointed specific areas whichshould be covered newregulations.

"Testimony taken duringour hearings was convincingthat particular attentionneeds to be focused onpromulgating standards forclassification of newprisoners, medical andpsychiatric screening ofinmates at the time of ad-mission and upgradingmethods of selecting andtraining for countycorrection officers," thereport asserted.

Hardwick's subcommitteehearings, which began onMay 16, were prompted bythe controversy whichswirled around the report ofthe Penal Study Com-mission headed by Dr. JohnF.X. Irving, former dean ofthe Seton Hall Law School,released last January.

The commission detailedright major deficiencies andproposed 13 solutions. Theseries of four publichearings of the Hardwicks u b c o m m i t t e e tooktestimony from members ofthe commission, DOC of-ficials, sheriffs, wardens

state needs in county jails i and other county officials,and state prisons asrecommended in the New-Jersey Correctional MasterPlan in 1974 and act onthem.

+That the State Attorney

the Public Advocate andthe Inmate Advocate.

Subcommittee membersin addition to Hardwickwere John Girgenti (D-Passaic) and Helen Szabo

General be requested to i (D-Mercer), before herissue a formal opinion as to recent resignation from thewhich federal, state and Assembly.

iVolunteers sign up U> help with library jobs at a recent coffee: seated left to right, MaryBellman, librarian Jeanne Desrosters, Dorothy llulsart, Elva Hughes, DorothyAnderson; standing Barbara Kuelling and Jean Llggltt, president of the Friends of theWeslfleld Memorial Library.

Library Friends Welcome VolunteersAt a recent coffee Friends

of the Westfield MemorialLibrary president JeanLiggitt and Service Chair-man Barbara Kuellingwelcomed a group of menand women who hadvolunteered to help thelibrary. There are manyways volunteers can assistthe regular library staff.

and these were explained byJeanne Desrosiers, directorof the library. Some of thejobs being done by volun-teers are shelving books,typing, shelf reading, filingcatalog cards, covering newbooks, especially in the Chil-dren's Department, mend-ing old books anddelivering books to shut-ins, j

Any people interested inthis type of volunteer workmay contact Mrs. WilliamKuelling of 1705 GrandviewAve. or the library. Shut-inswho would like to receivebooks on a regular basis arealso urged to contact Mrs.Kuelling or the library to beincluded in the biweeklydelivery,

Troop 72 Hikes Site OfWashington's Troop Encampment

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historic trail? Vou get igreat overnight hike. That'exactly what a contingent olscouts from Troop 72 hathis past weekend when theyhiked the Jockey HollowHistoric Trail through theMorristown NationaHistorical Park, MorrisCounty, New Jersey.

Led by Scoutmaster JayRochlin and AssistantScoutmasters Stan Lipsonand John Wright, the groupset out early Saturdaymorning, one of those chillybut clear days perfect forDecember hiking. Duringthe first day they coveredabout 10 miles of the trailbefore pitching tents for thenight at Lewis Morris Parklocated on convenientdistance from the trail.

As expected, the ternperature dropped tofreezing during the night sothe scouts put to good usesome of the winter campingskills they had learned. Inaddition, the senior scoutsshowed the troop's newermembers how to handlethemselves under suchconditions.

On Sunday after breakfastand a church service, thegroup broke camp andcompleted the 7-milebalance of the trail.Altogether, including the

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side trip to their camp site,the scouts covered roughly22 miles.

Jockey Hollow HistoricTrail is replete with earlyAmerican history of theRevolutionary era. The boyswalked portions of the WickFarm where GeneralWashington's troops hadencamped during the severewinter of 1779-80.

They also had an op-portunity to inspect firsthand the soldiers' huts builtto weather the cold wintermonths before their springoffensive against the Britishand Hessian troops. Thistook on a special meaningfor the scouts, mindful oftheir own one chilly night intents and down sleepingbags.

At trail's end, the scouts;pent time visiting George.Vashlngton's Headquartersn Morristown and the

national museum there.Each scout who suc-

cessfully completes the hikeand writes a 250-word essayon the historicalsignificance of what he hasseen will be awarded theJockey Hollow HistoricTrail medal.

The Troop 72 scouts whocompleted the JockeyHollow Trail this pastweekend include Senior

atrol Leader Earle Stokes,Andy Adams, Jim Dymond,Mike Goobic, Marc Halluin,David Lipson, Pete Mournand Nathan Newman.

Also there were Davidatterson, Jonathan and

Scott Pollack, Joe and MattQuirk, Mike Scacifero, PaulSeay and Dave and DanWright. Dave Grandell andGlenn Hilsinger joined the

roup for the final portion ofthe trail.

Page 11: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Wihon 171 Honors Scouts 'Country Style'Wilson Pack No. 171 Cub

Scouts held their monthlymeeting Nov. 16 with thetheme "High CountryUSA." Webelos Blue Denopened the meeting withpresentation of colors.

Assistant Cubmaster TomHackett, assisted by JimGruba, began with thetraditional honor inspectionwhereby points are assignedeach den based upon properdress by each scout andattendance by his family.Bear Den 8 won first placereceiving the "Honor Den ofthe Month" award.

Bear Den 1 presentedsome down home countrymusic with John Telling atpiano, Kevin DePalmer onguitar, Chris Weber withrecorder, David Hournazianon drums, Matthew Farleywith harmonica and RobertDiemer at xylophone.

Each den displayed theirindividual project tied intothe theme, "High CountryUSA" - from famousmountains constructed in avariety of ways to -terrariums decorated withwild plants and a display ofnatural bird foods.

The highlight of theevening was presentation ofawards. Bobbie Miller wasawarded the Bobcat badge.Wolf badges were receivedby: Eric Gerkens, BobbyKornicke, Jay McMeekan,John Schaeffer, MaxWunderle. Jeremy Grishamreceived both Bobcat andWolf badges. RobbieMcStay was awarded onesilver arrow and DavidBournazian two silverarrows.

In the Webelos Blue Den,Forester and Citizen awardswere presented to: JeremyDowell, Jonathan Dowell,Mike Gruba, Mike Kimble,Richy Leschik, Craig Nyeand Rusty Walker.

In the Webelos God Den,Geologist and Citizen

Assistant Cubmaster Tom Hackett, Wilson Pack No.171, assembles Den 8 for "Cub Scout Promise" duringrecent pack meeting, Left to right: Louis Peluso, HillyMoran, Tim Vockel. Billy llunnell, Robb Beally, FrankMcTeigue, Richard Klinghofer.

Far East Studies AlterViewpoints, Values

Den 1 Leader Barbara DePalmer marks lime tocountry music played in celebration of meeting's theme,"High CountryUSA".Front (o back: David Bournazianon drums; Kevin DePalmer with guitar: Chris Weber onrecorder; Matthew Farley with harmonica; ItobertDiemer playing xylophone; John Telling at piano.

awards were presented to:Fred .Hansen, RichardHarris, Ian Kaswan,Michael Kaswan, BrianMcLoughlin, Larry Play-ford, and Damon Quirk.Robert Campanelli received

awards for Athlete,Geologist and Citizen.

The next pack meeting isscheduled for Dec. 21. Forfurther information contactCubmaster Fred Hansen,572 Sherwood Parkway.

ClownShow for Kids

The Newark Museum willpresent an afternoon ofchildren's programs onSaturday, with a 12:30 p.m.mini-zoo talk followed at1:30 p.m. by "If EveryFool," a two-man clownshow.

Den 7 award recipients, left to right, front row: BobbyMiller, John Schaeffer, Jay McMeekan, JeremyGrisham. Back row: Bobby Kornicke, Eric Gerkens,Max Wunderle.

The Bureau of LaborStatistics was originallycreated by Congress in 1844and was made part of thenewly established U.S.Department of Labor in1913.

n preporefor the

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By Amy LaneAfter studying in the Far

East, two Westfield seniorsnow have a higher opinion ofthe school system, but findtheir own values havechanged.

Sue Dersh spent lastsummer in Indonesia whileNancy Levine studied inJapan under the AmericanField Service <AFS) ex-change student program.Now Sue and Nancy havenew outlooks about schoolhere and life in general.

As a result of her ex-perience. Sue feels she hasgreater insight into the goodand bad points of America.She describes theIndonesians as poor but notmaterialistic. She said, "Ican see how materialistic Iwas. I can now see howmaterialistic people in thiscountry are."

Sue felt it was great ex-perience to see a change, adifferent way of life. "It wasfun and challenging butdiscouraging at the sametime," Sue said.

Regarding education, Suewas astonished by the dif-ferences between Indonesiaand here. Through this trip,she can appreciate howfortunate she is to have sucha" good education. In sharpcontrast to the WestfieldHigh School library, theirlibrary consisted of two

shelves. The Indonesianeducational facilities are notimpressive compared toWestfield. Sue found plainclassrooms with desks butno extra equipment such asfilms, tape recorders andother learning aids we takefor granted at home.

"Kids here should thinktwice before downgradingour school," Sue explained.She went on, "1 now realizehow lucky I am. It's nice toknow these facilities areavailable whether they helpor not."

Although living with afamily of a different culture,Sue senses a strong feelingof unity with them. She stillretains a strong bond withher Indonesian acquain-tances half way around theworld. Sue found that theworld became smaller afterher AFS experience.

While Sue was inIndonesia, Nancy Levinespent her summer in Japan,learning about herself aswell as the Japaneseculture. Although her valuesh a v e n ' t c h a n g e ddrastically, Nancy hasdeveloped a new sense ofpriorities.

Nancy learned aboutOriental societies. Shestressed understanding.Nancy reflected, "If you try

nard enough to understand aforeign culture, you will seeits beauty. She also gained agreater love and under-standing of people.

In the Far East, Nancyalso learned the truemeaning of communication.She explained, "manypeople do not conceive thetotal. meaning of com-munication. They arebaffled if they can notcommunicate verbally."Nancy found herself in astrange situation. In Japan,she had to find other ways tocommunicate. She learnedto use her hands or look forsomething in common. Thismade her bonds closer.

Nancy learned to ap-preciate the Oriental con-cept of time. She explainedthat time anywhere islimited. She went on to say,"I became very close withmy family in Japan and hadlo make the most of mylimited time there. Now,this is my graduation year.In terms of life, I'm givenonly a certain amount oftime and I have lo use it lomy best advantage."

When Nancy was inJapan, she learned a greatdeal about herself. She wassurprised to learn what shecould handle in a differentsociety.

-THE WESTFIELD (KJ.) LEADEB, THUKSDAV, VtXEHBEB 1, 1»TS II

The "Sharps and Flats," a ninth grade vocal ensemble from Roosevelt Junior High,are seen in rehearsal for their first performance of thr year. They, along with anothervocal group, the "Teeneltes," will perform for the evening meeting of the Women'sSociety of the Methodist Church this evening . in the home or Mrs. Barbara Wilkin.The groups will also be performing In Hoosevelt's Holiday Program on December ISand 14.

450 in Tune for Roosevelt ProgramNearly 450 Roosevelt

Junior High students arepreparing for the annualholiday program which willbe presented at K p.m onDec. lliand 14 in Ihe school'sauditorium Wednesdaynight's program will fealurethe Treble Chorus. GleeClub. Concert Hand andthree ninth grade groups -Ihe Choir. Teenetles. andSharps and Flats. The ninthgrade groups und theConcert Hand will alsoappear on Thursday night's

program, along with IheMixed Chorus and Cirls'Chorus

The program will includetraditional Christmas carols:is well ;is compositions byBach. Hortniansky. and theI'.ealles "No Man is anIsland." 'Grandma'sChristmas Secret." "Carol -of the Hells." and "Polandat Christmas' are otherselections which will befeatured

Student accompanists for

Ihe choral groups are:Christopher Kelly. PatriciaWesler. Margaret Siecke.Gene Kelly, Patrick Mullen.Kiki Roll, and MeganRobinson Bruce Conoverwill play the guitar with theGlee Club's performance ofJ o h n D e n v e r ' s"Aspenglow."

The students will performunder Ihe direction of John.losa. David Shapiro, andCarol Tincher. The public isinvited to both per-formances

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Page 12: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

P a n It THE WESTFIELD (N-J.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 197»

YFCS Elects Board MemberMrs. Lee Breslau has been

elected to the Board ofDirectors of the Youth andFamily Counseling Service,a United Fund agencyserving the needs ofresidents in Westfield,Scotch Plains, BerkeleyHeights, Clark, Cranford,Garwood and Mountainside.

Mrs. Breslau. a Cranfordresident for 22 years, hasbeen active in communityactivities and was a

member of the Cranford HotLine. She is employed as acustomer service coor-dinator at RCL Electronics,a division of AMF, inIrvington.

The Youth and FamilyCounseling Service is anindependent, non-profitagency which providescasework counseling forfamilies and individualsexperiencing marital,parent-child, teenage and

adult personality problems.Professionally* trained,experienced counselorsoffer guidance andassistance to help in-dividuals work out their ownanswers to personalproblems, and to improvetheir relations with others.

YFCS is located at 233Prospect St. Fees are basedon a sliding scale, and allcalls and inquiries regard-ing appointments areconfidential.

Conco'fl Mini-Ouartj Sleek and slim Noftindtng Accu'ate (o Aiihin 60 seconds ayea' Tolaiiy Swiss crated in Uk goid TopleM $1390 Top nght $M60 Bottom S1460WalcheserJatged to show detail

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Sale of 2,000 Trees Yields"Two Gifts in One"

Christmas trees of avariety of shapes and sizesare being sold by the Y'sMen's Club of Westfield atthe Elm St. playground in its32nd annual Christmas treesale. Proceeds from thetrees will go to area,organizations and charities.Trees from Pennsylvaniaand as far away as NovaScotia have been truckedinto Westfield to be sold,Varieties of the more than2.000 trees include balsams,Scotch pines and Douglasfirs.

"The best part of ourChristmas tree sale is thatit's like getting two gifts forthe price of one," stated HillWilson of the Y's Men'sClub. "Families will enjoytrimming the tree andhaving it bring the spirit ofChristmas into their homes.Also, the money from thesale will help organizations

i in the Westfield area toj continue their programs andj services to the community.| Buying a tree from the Y'sj Men's Club is a gift to

Westfield." All moneyraised in the sale goes to the

I YMCA, YWCA, FourSeasons Outddor Center.Westfield Neighborhood

, Council. Westfield Com-j munily Center, CampI Speers-Eljabar. FrostI Valley Camps' and many' other service organizations.

"Some of the specialthings the Y's Men havedone with their time and themoney we've raised includehelping to build a waterfrontcabin at Four SeasonsOutdoor Center, givingmeals to the elderly throughthe'mobile meals' program.and the development andimprovement of. theWestfield NeighborhoodCouncil with seed moneytotalling $6,500. Since the

The Burns family buys their Christmas tree from theVs Men's Club of Westfield. Money raised in the sale willgo to service organizations in the Westfield area. Pic-lured above are Robert Burns, Mrs. Kathy Burns, SusanBurns, Chris Burns. Mark Burns, and Bob Burns and BillWilson from the Y's Men's Club of Westfield.

first Christmas tree sale,the Y's Men's Club hasraised more than $200,000which has been distributeda m o n g s e r v i c eorganizations in theWestfield area.

"Our Christmas Tree Salereflects the spirit of giving

in our community. Everydollar raised goes to helpingyouth and community serv-ices," Wilson concluded.

The sale continues untilDec. 24. For information onsale hours, call or stop bythe Westfield YMCA, 138Ferris PI.

Westfield public school special services departmentstaff members Rebecca Samuels, psychologist, (left)and Debbie Fitficld. learning disability teacher-consultant, use a mirror to show how Debbie's namemight look to a perceptually-impaired student. The twostaff members will present a program on "What It's LikeTo Be Perceptually Impaired" at an open-to-the-publicmeeting of the Parent-Teacher Council's SpecialKducation Committee at 1:15 p.m.Tuesdayin the-West-field board room. 302 Kim St.

Perceptually ImpairedTo Discuss

The special educationcommittee of the WestfieldParent Teacher Council willpresent a program on"What It's Like To BePerceptually Impaired" at1:15 p.m. Tuesday in theboard room at 302 Elm St.Debbie Fifield. learningdisability teacher • con-sultant and RebeccaSamuels, psychologist, ofthe Westfield special ser-vices department will ex-plain and have group par-ticipation in trying to en-vision how a learningdisabled child perceive!) the

world around him and howthis problem affects hislearning.

Debbie Fifield holds anWI.S. degree in learningdisabilities from St. Rose'sCollege, Albany, N.Y., and aM.S. in learning disabilityteacher-consultant fromMontclair State CollegeRebecca Samuels holds anM.S. degree in schoolpsychology from the StateUniversity of New York a'Plattsburgh.

Everyone is welcomeRefreshments will be served.

Tracing Your"Roots?"

Interested in tracing yourroots?" The Westfield

Memorial Library can help.According to Mrs.

'amelyn Fergusdn,eference librarian, the

library has a number ofhelpful books in its;eneological section and hasidded one new magazine,'The Geneological

Record," to its collection,and ordered a second, "TheGeneological Helper." The'Record," she said, is

available in the referenceroom. The "Helper" isexpected to be on theshelves in a few weeks.

The library also can ob-tain from the NationalArchives and RecordsCenter in Bayonnemicrofilms of censuses from1790 to 1890. Patrons mayview these by requesting theyear, state and countydesired from the referencelibrarian. The microfilms donot.circulate, but may beused on the microfilmreader in the library. Mrs.Ferguson said it takes abouttwo to three weeks for thelibrary to get the microfilmafter it's requested.

In addition to these aids,the library has the thirdsupplement to the "DARPatriot Index" and anumber of books to aidancestor-seekers - in-cluding "Tracing YourAncestors" by B. G,Groene; "Finding OurFathers," a guide book toJewish geneology, by DanRottenberg; "Finding YourRoots" by J. E. Westin;"Know Your Ancestors" byE. W. Williams, and the two-volume "Basic Course inGeneology" by GardnerMarian and Smith.

Newark AcademyChristmas Concert

Channukah and Christmas music, directed byNicholas A. Tino, fine art;instructor and organist-director of the UnitedChurch of Christ, Westfieldwill be featured at thiNewark Academy freiconcert tomorrow night at Iat the school, located at itSouth Orange Ave.Livingston. Mrs. WilmonMurray of Westfield is aalto in the Adult Chorus.

Doll Houses, Miniatures InSunday Display at

CannonballA display of doll houses

will be highlighted atCannonball House Museumon Sunday. The doll houses,owned by local residents,will be exhibited in theVictorian and Colonialrooms of the museumlocated at 1840 Front St. inScotch Plains.

One of the oldest dollhouses on display will be oneowned by Mr. and Mrs.Charles Detwiller. It is a twostory Victorian built around1890. It has the originalgreen glass transom overthe front door and theVictorian chandeliers havebeen electrified. The oldhouse is furnished withantique dolls and miniaturesmany of which belonged toDetwiller's sister. The househas a plant window filledwith tiny potted plants and atiny original MaxwellSimpson oil painting hangson a wall. The attic is filledwith items one might find ingrandmother's attic-toys,trunks and even a tinyspinning wheel.

Lewis Klingler willdisplay the doll house hemade for his daughter in1951. It is an exact replica oftheir Edison home-thehistoric Benjamin Shotwellhouse, circa 1775. Klinglermade all of the furniturehimself taking great painsto copy exactly pieces of

To Mark GOP

Victory at DanceAl Pisano, chairman of

the Republican Committeeof Union County announcedplans today for a victorydinner-dance at 7:15 p.m.Dec. 12 at theL'Affaire22inMountainside. Honored willbe Congressman MatthewRinaldo and Freeholder

' Rose Marie Sinnott who wonre-election, Walter Ulrich,surrogate, Dick Halfield.register, and EdSlomkowski, Freeholder.

Tickets are availablefrom any municipalchairman or the RepublicanCommittee headquarters inWestfield.

The Spirit of Y's Men's Trees

The Spirit of Christmas Present

service.

The New Jersey Nets' exciting guard, Eddie Jordan, willvisit our Maxi-Teller Banking Center in Westfield Thursday afternoon,December 14. Talk to Eddie about the Nets season and get his autograph.

Radio station WERA will do a live'broadcast from our Maxi-TellerCenter featuring Eddie and radio personality Bob Morris. Be on hand for thebig event, and take part in the excitement at 1590 on the radio dial.

Ask Eddie why a basketball player who needs cash afterplaying three overtimes needs Maxi-Teller, the 24-hour banking service.

When K comet to money needs

"We CanHelp"

THENATIONAL BANKOFHEW JERSEY

ty SB* J40Q' Union County 233-94O0 A Fidelity Union Bj"corporation B«nk • Mtmbcr F01C

The tree you trim this Christmas could be sending a boy to campnext Summer or provide him with the scholarship enabling him to learnto swim or play soccer, basketball or tennis. It could serve a hot meal toan elderly person, or mean financial aid to tots at a day care center,establish an environmental education center for the entire communityor send a worthy teenager abroad. That's the Westfield Y's Men's gift tothe community • a tree sale that truly embodies the spirit of Christmasgiving. More than SI40,000 has been raised for various causes since1946.

Every dollarof the proceeds goes to youth and community

A selection of 2,000 balsams, Scotch pines and Douglas firs truckedin from Nova Scotia and Pennsylvania are reasonably priced from SI .50to S25.O0, depending on size, shape and color. A special selection oftable top trees. It's the tree you give your town as a present.

Special discounts to

Westfield School System

and Churches

ELM STREET PLAYGROUND

Weekdays 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.Saturdays 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.Sundays 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.FROM DEC. 2nd TO DEC. 24th

furniture in his own home-an early American cherrychest with pull out drawers,a china closet with a hutch,an overstuffed sofa and evena braided rug.

A large eight roomcolonial farmhouse withwhite siding and blueshutters will be exhibited byDiane Lange of Hahway. Inthe dining room of this housestands a copy of an antiquecorner cupboard completewith tiny dishes. The secondfloor boasts a modernbathroom and the floors inthe house are made toresemble old wood planking.

Sarah Baker of ScotchPlains will display the dollhouse her brother Chrismade for her when she waseight years old. Sarah, whois now a ninth grader atTerrill Junior high school,has been collecting andmaking things for her threestory town house ever since.On the second floor there isa music room with an organthat plays "Silent Night." Inone corner of the musicroom two tiny mice sniff atcheese in a mousetrap. Onthe kitchen wall hangs anold fashioned wall telephoneand tiny cookies on a bakingsheet are cooling by thekitchen sink. Sarah hasfound that many doll housefurnishings can be createdout of ordinary householditems such as toothpicks,plastic caps, beads, andpoker chips. She har madelamps from plastic spraycan tops, the "cookies"were in reality lentils, athree leged stool was madefrom a poker chip covered infelt with three cul-of tooth-picks painted and gluedunderneath.

Mrs. Nancie Papazian ofScotch Plains has a threestory Victorian townhousewhich her husband made forher. She herself made thecurtains and did thewallpapering. Most of thefurniture has been 'madefrom kits. Mrs. Papazianalso stresses that manyfurnishings can be con-structed from things foundin the house. She made afireplace screen from anold belt buckle and chan-deliers from an oldnecklace. Her Victorianhouse has pine treesflanking the front door and awidows walk on the rooftop.

Mrs. Jo Borum of theCarriage World store,located across the streetfrom the museum, willdisplay several of herminiature rooms one ofwhich will be a modernkitchen. The public is in-vited to visit CannonballHouse from 2 to 4 for thisspecial display of dollhouses and miniaturefurnishings.

Resident'sKin

CommissionedMarine Second Lieut.

Mark D. Mahaffey, whosewife Linda is the daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Paul Eberhartof Massachusetts St., wascommissioned in his presentrank upon graduation fromOfficer Candidate School.

The 10-week school wasconducted at the MarineCorps Development andEducation Command inQuantico, Va. The course isdesigned to screen and trainpersonnel for com-missioning as Marine Corpsofficers by providing in-struction in leadership andbasic military subjects andemphasizing esprit de corpsand self-discipline. Ademanding physical con-ditioning program com-plements the students'course of study.

Mahaffey will now attendthe 21-week officer's BasicSchool, also at Quantico.

A 1978 graduate ofMuskingum College, NewConcord, Ohio, with abachelor of science degree,he joined the Marine Corpsin May 1978.

Five College Reps

To Visit WHSCollege visitors at West-

field High School next weekwill include:

Monday, 8:30 a.m., AlfredUniversity; lo a.m., BryantCollege, R.I.; i p ' mFelician College. "

Wednesday, i;30 p mWidener College, Pa

Friday, 9 a.m., Sawyer.school.

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Dwight F. Weeks, OlgaGraf, Donald H. Husch,Caryl C. Lewis and Betty F.Humiston were announcedas members of the 1978 RealEstate Million Dollar Clubat the New JerseyAssociation of Realtors'Convention held this week atAtlantic City. Certificatesare to be presented by theWestfield Board of Realtorsto the 21 members of theboard achieving this honor.

In congratulating theassociates, R. R. Barret Jr.,president, stated that "onceagain Barrett & Crain's rep-resentation is outstanding inour board area as in 1977."He cited their expertise inthe professional selling,listing and renting of homes,and the services given inrelocating families.

Dwight F. Weeks,assistant to the president,reported the efforts of theentire staff of the firm'sthree offices has resulted innew records being attainedin 1978. Total volume at thpend of the third quarterreached $24 million in sales,listings sold and referrals

Mrs. Lewis is associatedwith the firm's 43 Elm Stoffice, and Mrs. Graf andDonald H. Husch representthe 302 East Broad St. office.Mrs. Humiston's base is theMountainside office at 2New Providence Rd. DwightF. Weeks is presentlylocated at the former NancyF. Reynolds Associates'office on Broad St,

The honored group, all

Five Barrett & Crain AssociatesMembers of Million Dollar Club

Betty F. Humiston

Olga Grafformer "Million Dollar"members in past years,totals many years of experi-ence in the real estate field.

Skies of Tut GlitterAt Newark Planetarium

Ancient Egypt - the land ofthe Pharaohs - will come tolife in a new sky show,"Universe of (hePharaohs," premiering atthe Newark MuseumPlanetarium at 2 p.m. onSaturday, Dec. 16.

Visitors to thePlanetarium will see thestars as they actually ap-peared during the reign ofthe Pharaoh Tutankhamun,as the planetarium in-strument is adjusted tocarry the audience in timeand space to ancient Egypt.

Planetarium DirectorGary Swangin announcedthat this special program isan effort to focus attentionon an aspect of Egyptianculture that is frequentlyoverlooked. Egyptianastronomy had centuries ofdevelopment and wascomplexlyE g y p t i a nagriculturechitecture.

related tor e l i g i o n ,and ar-

"Universe of thePharoahs" will examinesome of the reasons why theimage of the sun wasdepicted on virtually everytemple and monument inancient Egypt, and why theancient Egyptians wor-shipped the star Sirius, aswell as the possibility thatthe stars were used in theconstruction of the GreatPyramid.

In recent years,astronomers and ar-chaeologists have shownincreasing interest tnpossible scientific in-terpretations of the sym-bolism of Egyptian gods andtheir temples. Evidenceexists that some of theseancient structures couldhave been astronomicalobservatories.

According to Swangin,"many people are acquain-ted with the fact that "(hepharaohs identifiedthemselves with the sun.However, it was more thansimple worship. The ancientEgyptians kept detailedrecords and had asophisticated knowledge ofthe skies."

"Universe of thePharaohs," the NewarkMuseum Planetarium'scontribution to the Hurry ofactivities generated by theMetropolitan Museum's' ' T r e a s u r e s ofTutankhamum" exhibition,will be presented at 2 p.m.on Saturdays and Sundaysfrom Dec. 16 through Dec.31. Beginning Jan. C,"Universe of the Pharaohs"

SHOPPINGWEEKS LEFT

is scheduled for 12:15, 1, 2, 3and 4 p.m. on Saturdays,Sundays and holidaysthrough Feb. 25.• The Newark MuseumPlanetarium is located at 49Washington St. in downtownNewark, with parkingavailable in the adjacent lotat the corner of Universityand Central Avenues, Forticket and showtime in-formation, contact theN e w a r k M u s e u mPlanetarium.

Caryl Cl^wis

Dwight ¥. Weeks

Nature'sPaintbrush

To help New Jerseyansand visitors enjoy nature'sfall foliage show to thefullest, the state Depart-ment of Environmental Pro-tection (DEP) has prepareda new brochure whichdetails day trips tn sixdifferent areas in the state.

Copies of "Nature'sPaintbrush Colors NewJersey Beautiful" areavailable from DEP'sBureau of Parks, Box 1490.Trenton 08625; the N.J.Division of Tourism. Box400, Trenton08625; or at anystate park, forest or historicsite office.

Donald II. Husch

WHS OrchestraDebut Saturday

An "exciting program"has been arranged byJoseph Ragno, director ofthe Westfield High SchoolOrchestra, for the openingconcert of the season at 8p.m. Saturday. Everyonefrom the community isinvited and a special in-vitation is extended tosenior citizens as specialguests.

The orchestra rehearsedfor many weeks and theprogram will include Gothfc.Suite by Cesar Franck,Rush Hour in Hong Kong byAbraham Chasins, selec-tions from EngelbertHumperdinck's Hansel andGretel and two other or-chestral selections not yet'devulged by Ragno. Soloistswill be Tracy Redd and JoanCuratozzola.

The concert will takeplace in the Senior HighSchool Auditorium onDorian Rd. Student andadult tickets will beavailable at the door. Seniorcitizens are guests.

Under the Federal Portsand Waterways Act of 1972,the U.S. Coast Guard hasfull authority over ships ofany flag operating in U.S.waters to enforceregulations -designed toprevent oil spills or othermarine hazards.

Council Reviews PlansFor Solid

Waste DisposalAt its meeting here last

week, the District SolidWaste Advisory Council ofUnion County reviewedavailable alternatives forthe disposal of the county'ssolid waste.

An alternative waspresented by Douglas R,Nichols Jr. and George M.Pirich from flesearch-CottreJl, who discussed apreliminary report on thefeasibility of implementinga resource recovery systemin Union County. Their planwould utilize three in-dividual refuse-to-energyplants in Elizabeth, Lindenand Clark, The steamenergy would be sold toindustrial users. Revenuebonds could be used tofinance the venture whichwould total about $23 milliondollars.

Albert J. Mellini of M.Disko Associates, theconsulting engineering firmhired by the county to reportto the council, continuedDisko's preliminary reportconcerning solid wastecollection and disposal inUnion County. He presentedsludge and septage data andquantity data on residentialand industrial-commercialsolid waste.

Joseph Kazar. solid wasteplanner for Union County,noted that Merck and Co.,Inc. also was looking intoresource recovery in UnionCounty working with theHooker Chemical Company.He reported that the PortAuthority was doing afeasibility study on resourcerecovery in industrialparks. Enabling legislationhas been passed by bothNew York and New Jersey,with a master plan expectedby spring of 1979.

Mrs. Joan Buhrendorfdiscussed the innovativesource separation programof six towns in MonmouthCounty. They plan to enterinto an "inter-local servicesagreement" and as a groupwill contract with a collectorwho will pick up on a regularschedule. In this wa'y these

CHRISTMAS I I I !

FIGHT LUNG DISEASEWITH CHRISTMAS SEALS

Free Merrill Lynch "2-in-l Seminar" on: • <

The new tax law and how itaffects investors...plus important

"tax-reducing techniques"T'his big event is actually two Seminars in one.

Il . -. It takes a close look at virtually every factorthat can affect your current income tax situation-including the provisions of the new tax law. Itsuggests practical ways to take advantage of orcope with them.

The 2-in-l Seminar features an exclusiveslide show on "Tax-Saving Opportunities," anda presentation on videotape by Barnard Hughes,noted theater and television personality, discussesand analyzes the new tax bill's provisions. TheSeminar gives you an ideal opportunity to getbriefing on such subjects as:

• How the new tax bill provisions will affectcapital gains taxes.

• What the new law's impact will be oncorporate taxes.

• How the law's "structure" will affecthome sales.

• What the new tax law means to those inher-iting property.

• How the new tax law could affect yourretirement.

• What its impact will be on deferred pay andstock options.

• How it will affect tax shelters.

• How to get "tax-free incotne"—wiih municipalbonds, bond funds and investment trusts.

• How to select the"right" Keogh or IRA plan.• The dramatic (and little-known) advantages

of lax-deferred annuities.• And more.

If you want to know where you stand withregard to the new tax law—if you want to knowwhere and how to gain increased lax advantages on

your investments—you have an excellent opportu-nity to find out by attending this exclusive free2-in-l Seminar.

For free reservations, simply call or mail thecoupon below.

TIME: 8:00 p.m.DATE: Wednesday, December 13thPLACE: At Coachman Inn, 10 Jackson Drive, Cranford

Mail today or call for Free reservationsMail to: Merrill Lynch, 105 Elm Street, Wcstdeld, N.J. 07090Or call: 6544880

D Yes, I am interested in attending your free2-in 1 Seminar.Please reserve seat(s) for me.

Name

D No, I cannot attend. Please send me your freematerial on (he subject.

Address

City State _Zip_

Business Phone Home PhoneMerrill Lvnch customers, please gire name and office address of Account Executive:

Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner 8 Smith Inc.*<Xtip>Ti|bi IWIAlerall Ljiuht'tmt Fenn« & Smith [tic Membtf.SrtuMin tmnlur r

communities hope to satisfythe "economy of scale"numbers required to make acurb-side pickup programpay its own way.

The public is welcome toattend the Dec. 27 meetingat 300 North Ave. East at 8p.m.

Representatives fromWestfield include Mayor'salternate Mrs. Betty List,Mrs. Linda L. Timmins andMrs. Joan W. Buhrendorf ofthe Union CountyEnvironmental HealthAdvisory Board.

Soldiers in ancient Rome ategarlic in the belief that itgave them courage in battle.

-THE WESTFIELD (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER T, 1»7» Pafe IS

The Madrigal Singers will present a concert of Christmas music on Sunday at 4 p.m. atthe Summit Art Center, 68 Elm St., Summit. Program chairperson for thr event is WilliHoller of Chatham. Coordinator for the singers is Mrs. John Cook of Westfielci. Seatedfrom left are Charlotte Djkema, Ann Schaper, Donna Lawrence, Kathy Beyer. HettyOoucher, Helen Neidhart, Lois Thomas and Mrs. Cook. Standing from left are KugeneThomas, Robert Ehrbar, Alan Ciunther, Peter Dykema, David Lawrence. ConductorDaniel Kautzman and Len Schaper.

Workshop for Small Businessmen TuesdayA free workshop entitled

"Kducation for PeopleGoing into Business" will beheld Tuesday, at theFederal Building, 970 Broad

St., Newark from 9 a.m. to 4p.m. in room 730. Theworkshop will coverfinancing, record keeping,taxes, pitfalls, advertising

and legal aspects of startinga small business. For moreinformation call the U.S.S m a l l B u s i n e s sAdministration in Newark.

\bur family will findmany happy returns

TIME SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

8.45 8.00 8 years$1,000 minimum

effectiveannualyield on

%

6 to 8 years'"' $1,000 minimum

7.90 effectiveannualyield on

4 to 6 years51,000 minimum

1 %eflectiveannualyield on 6.75 2-1/2 to 4 years

minimum

1%effectiveannualyield on 6.50 1 to 2-1/2 years

5500 minimum

Interest compounded daily from day of deposit, paid monthly.Federal regulations require substantial interest penalty forearly withdrawal from Time Savings Accounts.

REGULAR SAVINGS ACCOUNT^

elftcuve

Interest is earned from day of deposit to day of withdrawal,compounded daily and paid monthly provided a balance of atleast $5 is left in the account until the end of the monthly period.

Annual yield is earned when principal and interest remain on deposit fora year.

Serving your family?; financial needs since 1851.

Scotch Plains: North Ave.. Corner of Oestwood Rd. — 654-4622Elizabeth: I Union Square E. 540 Morris Ave. — 289-0800

Additional offices in Middletown. Hamilton Township. Toms River, Aberdeen & Freehold

MEMBER F.D.I.C. — SAVINGS INSURED TO $40,000

Page 14: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Page U THE WESTFIELD CH.J.) LEADEB, THURSDAY, DECEMBER T, 1978-

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE ' REAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE RIAL ESTATE FOR SALE

'"•'' REALTORS INSURORS ''*'"

56 Years ofProfessional & Friendly

Service

MULTIPLE LISTING MEMBERS

wisTntin . 115 ELM STREET SCOTCH PLAINSMOI.-XTAINSIW FANWOO!)

232-4700MOVE RIGHT IN

and enjoy the holidays in this spacious older colonial. Prime Westfield area withinwalking distance of schools, churches and town. This perfect family home offersexcellent living space for a big family. Spacious living room with brick fireplace,formal dining room, modern kitchen and a first floor den plus a finished recrea-tion room below. Five bedrooms and Vh baths complete the picture. Call today$114,500

WANTED

A family to love this special brick and frame three bedroom colonial as much asprevious owners have. Located on a cul-de-sac not far from a popular elementaryschool. Offering a living room with fireplace and lovely bay window, dining room

- with chair rail, first floor den and modern eat-in kitchen. Do call for an appoint- 'ment $79,900

OLDIE SUT GOODIE

This spacious older colonial home offers the desirable center hall, large livingroom with fireplace, formal dining room and a modern kitchen with table space.There are three bedrooms and a nursery on the second floor plus a (16x14)bedroom and storage area on the third. Located on a quiet tree lined street youshould see this one! $71,900

Buying - Selling?

LET US WRAP IT ALL UP

Once you tell us what you want, we'll handle the whole package-. Help you decideon a realistic price. Find you likely prospects. Locate funds, if necessary, and belparrange financing. Explain the ins and outs of closing.

Pearsall & Frankenbach, Inc. are real estate experts, professionally obligated tobe well-informed on properties. . . p r i c e s . . . market conditions . . . the law. . . all the things that provide the soundest advice for the best deal possible.

Save yourself a bundle of time, trouble and expense. Before you buy or sell realestate, talk to us at Pearsall & Frankenbach, Inc.

May We Look For a Home For You?

SPECIALIZING IN RESIDENTIAL PRbPERTIESAppraising - Listing • Selling

Evenings only:Mrs. Alan 8ruce Conlln 5 ;Allhlld W. Mlehelson " . . I IJtinttit Ft4orocko H i ,««OorlsH.floylc MMWJSartdl puriall 1M-WI0Kamryn Shea <S4-3»SITerryMalfle J3J.7J87ev t rmn> . Ptarta . '

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE I REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

I ft ft ft ft ft ftColonial

<- 7

>r

V-

BARRETT & CRAIN* • * * REALTORS * * *

SANTA'S ON HIS WAYto the Jr. Women's Club

XMAS BOUTIQUE

Saturday, December 9th - 10AM-4PMRoosevelt Junior High School, Westfield

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Located in two-family zone and easify adapted for two apartments . . . 2 fullbaths, 3 bedrooms - Don't miss it!GRAND TUDOR 165,000

Built 1977 - owner-builder's custom home with unbelievable built-in con-veniences.

KAREN TERRACE . 119,000

Adjoining "Wychwood Section" . . . 7 rooms, 2Vi baths and den . . . extrasinclude recreation room, rear patio, quiet, private neighborhood and beautifulgrounds.

COMFORTABLE COLONIAL 76,000

Just listed - 4 bedrooms, 1 V& baths and recently improved including new wiringand copper pipes, exterior paint and just being redecorated - we suggest a calltoday.

BARRETT & CRAIN

&

&

&

#

#

tl'c C«u

Westfield (302 E. Broad St.)(Evenings onl«)

Agnei Buckley 2331207Myrtle Jenkins 2337670

232-6300

Donald H. Musch J33-J67S Oloa GrafNancy Bre

Mountainside (2 New Providence Rd.)(Evenings only)

233-1800

2324606Richard M. Corbet 532 8856 David G. Pearson 232-7051 Ann GrahamGuy D. Mulford 2327855 Betty Humlston 132-4196Howard W. Meizger MAI SRPA R.R. Barrett Jr., CPM

Westfield (43 Elm St.)(Evenings only)

Will lam W. Shepps rd 8899226Jean Thomas Massard 233-6301

232-1800

Caryl Lewis J33-631* ShirleyGeorge G. Crane ZH-'l 'SDwlght F. weete 232-2W7

999226 Caryl Lewis 2336316 SJ1 1™/,™1"d 233-6301 George G. Crane 233-6185 W.D. Sims,

D l t te 2322347

MULTIPLE USTINGMEMBERSWes!flel(l.MountalniWe.ScotehPt»lii»-F»''wo0'1

Somertet County * Vlclnlly

"CLA" ic^u&^&fffil^f^X^to R.loe-11. inc.) -Professional NY . Metropolitan 1 National executive referral service oroanUatlons.

ft

SAMPLE OF

WESTFIELD LISTINGS

Expanded Ranch $55,5003BR, 1% Baths

Attractive Split $61,5003BR.lMB3t.lis

Older Colonial $62,9004 BR. 1 Bath

1955 Split $72,9003BR,J!4Baths

Crisp Colonial $73,5003 BR, 1 Bath

1968 Colonial $79,9004 BR, Vk + Vi Baths

1941 Colonial $79,9003 BR, 1 Bath

Colonial $82,5005 BR, 2 Baths

1958 Split $89,9003 BR. 2W Baths

Ranch $96,9004 BR, 2 Baths

Older Colonial $114,5005 BR, 2Vi Baths

Slate Roofed Col. $119,0004 BR, Vh Baths

Colonial $130,000Professional Zone

Wychwood Ranch-Cape$165,000

5 BR, 4W baths

Betz&BischotT

202 MOUNTAIN AVE.lot the Park) •

253-1422

Evening Phones:Constance Dtvls 332-105SBonn A. Snyder 33I-0I3SOeurlt Swetney » M 1 4 »Pit Width 332-OHOBirteiichofl 333-1422

ECKHART.s* REALTORS

CHARMING RANCH - JUST LISTED!$82,500

SHACMMAXON DRIVE - 4 BEDROOMS - Vh BATHS$119,000

ON AN ACRE IN SCOTCH PLAINS$119,000

CUSTOM RANCH - GREAT POTENTIAL$149,000

INDIAN FOREST - OUTSTANDING$169,000

• 233-2222SERVING

WESTFIELD, SCOTCH PLAINS, FANWOOD ;MOUNTAINSIDE, CRANFORD, CLARK

AND ALL SOMERSET COUNTY,JJJLENOXAV6. WESTFIELD.N.J.

AMPLEOFF STREET PARKINGLOCAL REPRE5ENTATIUESFOR

. REALESTATE - U S AEvenings Only ,Lucille K. Roll U1441?Doris M. Molowa U V l U tCtnt M. Hall .- Ui-111*W. Merrltt Colthimir I l l |WIj'oyce Santa mar la • \ 7tMIMWalter E. Eckhari

Page 15: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

RIAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE RIAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

, r f i t C A I I I I O o l H O M I N i l i i ( . v l l n ' o " I H O M I N r I n ( , \ l l m \ ( , | H O M I S • • • • ' C * A I I I I I V o l H O M I S , , « ( , \ I I I U V O I Z.

X

t

H. CLAY FRIEDRICHS, INC.REALTORS • EST. 1927

North Ave. & Elmer St. Westfield233-0065

Fanwood Office-322-7700Warren Office-647-6222

COMFORT FOR SALE

Here's a real home in wonderful condition from top tobottom. 24' living room with fireplace, family sizeddining room, sunroom-den, kitchen with breakfastroom, first floor laundry and lavatory. Three bedrooms

and tiled bath. On a quiet dead-end street (great forkids) and walking distance to schools. Westfield

$78,500.

THE UNITED FUND JlfcWESTFIELD I Pof

Harriot LilsonLilian Goss

Dorothy WalswecrBotty Flannery

Ruth TaylorJudy Zanc

At BclloKay Booth!

Betty HamptonHelen Baker

Gflylc EarnerAugusta ElliottPinky Luerssen

RIAL ESTATE FOR SALE

1 U E WESTFIELO JNJ.) LEADER, TOUKJ3DAY, DECEMBER 7, 1»7« Tf» U

REAL ESTATE FOR SALEREAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

l HOMIS THI (^AllllOOl HOMIS

IlllllllllllllllllllllUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllUI!ol H O M I N i In C\l l»n> ol H U M I S T I I I ( - I»» H<

JUST LISTED Westfield colonial in move-in conditionand featuring three bedrooms, Vk baths, formal diningroom and modern eat-in kitchen with separatebreakfast room. $64,500

r2l.TAYLOR & LOVE

436 South Ave.. Westfield. 654-6666

JUsf l lSTED! ~A GRACIOUS ENGLISH TUDOR IN-NORTHSIDE WESTFIELD - 3 TWIN BEDROOMS,SPARKLING EAT-IN KITCHEN - FAMILY-SIZE DININGROOM - LOVINGLY MAINTAINED AND ACCENTED BYLUSH NEW CARPETING - OFFERED AT $82,900.

REALTORS*'JIB EAST a«OADS.T»«' • IKS1HEID.NJ OIOSO12011 233 E639

k. I. >- <B

CrtytoCrty

National Relocation Service

I0O0 s ol AIVJCMII'I Cnnsl 10 Ca,l5I

EVENINGS

srr;""*" .to?3 ttsss?' SSIWey Staeniraf e 233-68S4

j)anl<er <§" JJanker, Dnc.REALTORS

THREE NEW LISTINGS, This most •interesting "Wychwood" Colonial was

built by Bob Evans. It is a Center Hall dwelling with11 rooms, including maid's room and bath on 1stfloor.All rooms are spacious, including a 15x22 livingroom, 14x16 dining room and 13x19 master bed-room. Both living room and library have log burningfireplaces. Four bedrooms, plus storage room (orpossible 5th bedroom) and 2 tiled baths on secondfloor.Also a 22' open screened porch to rear with flag-stone floor. 2 car attached garage. Wood shingleroof. Beautiful well shrubbed property. Stone andcedar shake construction. Call us to inspect. Listedat $187,500.00

2. This three bedroom, 2 bath ranch is located in the"Scotchwood" section of Scotch Plains. It is com-plete with a 16x36 inground pool and situated on aspacious wooded lot. It has a fireplace both in the15x23 living room and the basement recreationroom (which has a wet bar). The family room is13x22. Wall to wall carpeting in the living room anddining room and central air conditioning are otherextras. 2 car attached garage. Priced at$150,000.00

3. Small but nice four bedroom Cape on the Boulevardin Westfield. It has living room; tiled bath withshower, 2 bedrooms and kitchen with part paneleddinette all on 1st floor. 2 other bedrooms andstorage space on second floor. Large oversized de-tached garage. Furnace only one year old. Roof hasalso been replaced. Priced at $56,900.00

149 timer St.. cor.Lenox Ave., Westfield

232-4848

Lucitlli A. Olhrllln 1J1-7H*Thomii F. Mihnlno a iHtUijoroihy M. Fischer J"-'«°LHUilnir 131-1144Alberto. Danker UM144

HOUSE FOR BENTWESTFIELD: 6 room duplex.Ideal location. Security andutilities. Call 2332579, 7-8:30 a.m.and evenings.

WESTFIELD, 4 bedroom housewith large living room, diningroom and eat-In kitchen. Centrallylocated on quiet north sidecul-de-sac. Walking distance toschools, shopping and transpor-tation. S550. per month.

ALAN JOHNSTON INC.Call 232-5644 or 2328045

APARTMENT FOR RENTWESTFIELD ARMS244 PROSPECT ST.

783-4055Three and one-half rooms:

S268.Four floor elevator building: 1"3blocks to center of town and RRstation: Very quiet. 4-20 TF

WESTFIELOARMS244 PROSPECT ST.

713-4055 .Three and one-half rooms:

S2B9 per monthFour floor elevator building: IV?blocks to center of town and RRstation: Very quiet. 4-20 TF

OFFICES FOR RENT

Mountainside, just off Rt. 22.Office units from 675 sq. ft. to 3900sq. ft. Available immediately.Short or long term lease avail-able. Exclusive agent

David T. Houston Co.(201)429-8000

11-22 4T

WESTFIELD — Bright, cheerfuloffice room, 2nd floor, Centerbusiness district. SH5. Write Box33, Westfield Leader.

INSTRUCTIONS

FLUTE-SAXOPHONECLARINET

Private Instructionlichard Kraut 322-8572

11-10-77 rf

CERAMIC LESSONS

Both day and evening Instruc-tions by certified teacher.

'.ILO STUDIOS332-9109

Oct. 5 TF

FLEA MARKETWashington Valley Fire Co. Dec.10 and second Sunday of everymonth, rainor shine. 14Qwashing-ton Valley Rd., Warren, N.J.Information and reservations,4692443

DOG"Scruffy," 9 month old mediumsize, mixed terrier. Needs goodhome and lots of love. All shotsand altered. Call 48<S 0230

To AdvertiseCall.

232-4407

yRE ALTO*

I

112 ELM STREET. WESTFIELD

233-5555MEMBER

WESTFIELD BOARD of REALTORSSOMERSET COUNTY BOARD of REALTORSALL POINTS RELOCATION SERVICE, INC.

MEHIER

ARTISrS HOMECharming. On a lovely lot on a quiet street in West-field. Living room with fireplace and bay window,formal dining room, modern eat-in kitchen, panelled

•family room, 3 good-sized bedrooms, 2 full baths, 2 1 ''screened porch. New carpeting. Centrally air-condi'tioned. Recently decorated inside and out. January'possession. $89,900. . .

COUNTRY FARM HOUSEwith expansion wing ideal for mother-daughter arrange-ment. Ten rooms; five bedrooms, Florida room, livingroom, dining room, 3 baths and two car garage. Newroof, house completely redecorated inside and out in7 8 . Central fire alarm system. Extra deep property(300 ft.) has room for tennis court and pool. West-field. $92,500.

ENGLISH STYLEFour bedroom Colonial on a tree-lined street on theNorth side of Westfield. Large living room withfireplace and holiday dinner size dining room. Enjoythe first floor den, jalousied-screened porch and apretty back yard. 8 rooms, H4 baths and a two cargarage. $99,500.

FOR RENT

For December occupancy. 3 bedroom Colonial house ingood convenient Westfield location. Owner willdecorate to your taste. $485. mo.

Immaculate 3 bedroorji Colonial with den on first floorand porch. On a quiet Westfield street. Immediateoccupancy. $575. mo.

JOY BROWNREALTORS

233-5555112 ELM ST, WESTFIELDMULTIPLE LISTINGS

WESTFIELO - MOUNTAINSIDE - SCOTCH PLAINSFANWOOD AND SOMERSET COUNTY

EVENINGS:Elvira ArdreySylvia CohenIngrld D'AmandaLorraine FeldmanMarilyn KellyBarbara LaVelleCarolyn WlldayWy WlldayJoy BrownGarrett Brown

3J2-3MI312-3491)

, 233-4I81232-2547231-51)2313-4939332-1413W2-14M654-47956S4-479S

LOVELY COLONIAL

This lovely Colonial is situated on an extra large lot infriendly Scotch Plains neighborhood. Well built andattractively detailed with built-ins, chairrail and manyother custom features. Comfortable living with largeenclosed porch, first floor den and modern kitchenwith breakfast space. There are three twin sizebedrooms and two full ceramic baths. Painted insideand out in 7 8 and many extras included. Asking$74,900.

CHARLES W. ROKOSNY111 Central Avenue

Isabelle BerseEvenings

233-5357 Helen CiubacklJeanneMonaghan

TWO FAMILY in tip top condition with five rooms eachfloor, modern kitchens, two tiled baths, attic and fullbasement plus two car garage. Fenced rear yard.Walking distance to station in this pretty Sc. Pft. area.$98,500

VICTORIAN twelve room, 2V5 bath home boasting fivebedrooms for that large family wanting close proximityto schools and town yet in a fine north side West-field area. Two fireplaces, 200' depth lot, very wellkept. $114,500.

SHACKAMAXON center hall colonial in such aconvenient Westfield location for all schools andstation. The best of construction with slate roof andtrue colonial trim and moldings. Three twin sizedbedrooms plus a fourth on the third floor which needsadditional finishing. Fireplace in both the living roomand the basement family room, rear sc. porch, two cargarage. $119,000.

FIRST HOME BUYERS will love this eight room, lfcbath colonial in a quiet Westfield area of youngfamilies. First floor laundry, nice eat in kitchen, base-ment, attic storage. Swim club nearby. Quick posses-sion, if needed. $62,900.

7/ieJ A.

ReauorJ N I andurort)2 0 P R O S P E C T S T H E E T

W E S T F I E L D , N E W J E R S E Y

2 0 1 2 3 2 - 0 3 0 0

A professional person-to-oarson service forfamilies relocating In tn« USA and CanMi

A l you need to knowin Real Estate!"

Electronic Rejllv Ai>ocialet

CHAMPAGNE TASTE

Luxury with liability in beautiful professionally land-scaped setting on delightful Mountainside cul-de-sac.Large living room with fireplace, formal dining room,eat in kitchen, panelled den, 3 bedrooms, IVi baths,huge recreation room. Luxurious amenities includecentral air, 2 zone heat, radio controlled garage doors$139,900

cct'a/ef/

of Wcstfield, Inc.254 East Broad St., Westfield 232-7000

"REALTORSMemberi WmtUeld and

Crantord Multiple Listing

Page 16: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Face If THE WESTFIELD (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBEB 7,

RCAL [STATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE ; REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

"THE PROTECTORS'Whether you're looking to buy, or sell a home, you can be protected by the Dobbs, Realtors/BetterHomes and Gardens Home Protection Plan.

The protection plan assures you that the home you want to sell, (or the home you want to buy),will be protected against unforeseen breakdowns, for one or two years after purchase or sale.

Your home can be protected against many problems occurring after it's listed If the home youbuy is under the Better Homes and Gardens Home Protection Plaa you shouldn't find anyuncomfortable surprises after you move in. Ask us about it You'll see why they call us T h e Protectors:

New DrugAdvances

BetterHomes,•*• -*. and Hardens

Dobbs. Realtors/Better Homes and Gardensserves six of Mew Jersey's fastest growing counties:

Somerset, Morris, Hunterdon. Warren. Union and Essex.Call toll free; 800-452-9755

Exceptionally well built four bedroom family home

in an established Fanwood neighborhood. Sun filled

living room with a beautiful picture window for your

greenery, further accented by an open hearth

fireplace. Dining room w-built-ins opening to raised

deck wscenic view of the Watchung Hills. Other

appointments: secluded paneled family room,

central air conditioning, 2% baths, new w-w

carpeting, adds to the comfort and convenience for

family living. Offers walking distance to all schools

and transportation. Newly listed. {82,900.

PAMPERED BEAUTY

Executive ranch richly shrubbed and lavishly treed

with evergreens, high on a knoll overlooking the

Watchung Mountains. 19' foyer with slate floor and

French Normandy paneling. Luxurious wall to wall in

sunken living room & dining room, Panelled den

with wall of brick and raised hearth fireplace. 23'

up-to-the-minute kitchen with ceramic floor and

large comfortable dining area. Four spacious bed-

rooms, 2W custom appointed baths. Below grade

paneled family room 15x27 for family entertain-

ment. 2 car garage, central air conditioning, security

and fire systems - lots of wall to wall carpeting -

secluded patio 26x30 with gas grill, electric garage

doors. Call for appointment to see this very special

Westfield listing - {179,900.

EVES:Betty DlxonBill HerringMaurice DuffyRuth C. Tat*

7W-19W,.M9-4712BW-7M3233-34M

350 Park Ave.,

Scotch Plains

TIP TOP CONSTRUCTION!

JUST ONE OF THE FEATURES IN THIS DESIRABLEMOUNTAINSIDE SPLIT LEVEL BEAUTY. ATTRACTIVEENTRY WITH GUEST CLOSET. SUN DRENCHED LIVINGROOM WITH FIREPLACE. FORMAL DINING ROOM.MODERN EAT-IN KITCHEN. SCREENED PORCH. THREEDELIGHTFUL BEDROOMS. 2 TILED BATHS. OIL HEAT.DOUBLE GARAGE. VERY LOW TAXES. MANY EXTRASINCLUDED. THE LOCATION IS SUPERB. $98,500.

LEE K. W.RING.REALTOR15 f. MOADIT.

A NEW LISTINGThis is a gem of a house that is absolutely In move-Jn condi-tion. Situated in a lovely area of Westfield, the property hasbeen professionally maintained, with a fenced in play area, itis a terrific family home. There are three bedrooms, amodern eat-In kitchen, living room, dining room plusbeautiful family room. There is an additional paneled room,which would make a great study, playroom, hobby room, e1c.This house Is fully air conditioned and there Is wall to wallcarpeting throughout which is In excellent condition. Veryreasonably priced at $89,900 so don't wait to see It. Call for anappointment.

LOUIS GELFAND INC.REALTOR

20] Elm St. 634-5W0

SAVE YOU$2400.

most real estate companiescharge 6%

WE DO IT ALL FOR

2%the newest concept inSelling Your House

WE ADVERTISE IT . . . WE SHOW IT . . . WE SELL ITWE DO ALL THE PAPER WORK!

National Home Search will make a comparative market analysis of your home. Install anattractive "FOR SALE" sign, take 20 Interior and exterior color Hide pictures for viewingon our large screen, prepare detailed Information folders for owner and prospects, doextensive advertising . . . display and classified. We guarantee In wrltlno. to advertise yourproperty 30 times during course of listing. All this for a minimal service charge.National Home Search eliminates all unnecessary trallic through your house. WE SHOWonly to pre-qualified prospects. NO DREAMERS. Potential buyers have seen your house Inour exclusive "Photo Library of Homes" before making physical Inspection.

HERE IS HOW YOU PROFIT:IF YOU HAVE A (50,000 house, and National Home Search sells It, your total cost It 11,000. . . NOT S3,MO. II you have a 170,000 house and National Home Search sells If, again yourcost Is only tl,«M . . . NOT M.J0O and so on.

WE'RE THE ONETO TURN TO! UMtOft •

IUTKMAL HQM IUMCM

LICENSED REAL ESTATE BROKERnol offjcti opening loon afford gr»*t opportunity • • »••?>• with llrwMI •n4/*r rial •itol* ihlllt.

CONSUMERS REALTY INC.40 SOUTH AVENUE

FANWOOD, N.J.3U2-9339

It's no longer a roomer. . . it's a fact that we have just listed, FOR RENT

thjs seven roomer that includes a living room with fireplace, dining room

kitchen, 1st floor family room, three bedrooms & garage. SUPER WEST

FIELO location, convenient to all services. Asking $475.00 oer month.

ANTIQUES

ANTIQUES FOR CHRISTMASLantern HOUM, Basking Ridge

Buy for pleasure and InvestmentFormal furniture, country furniture,

Lamps, mirrors, weather vanes, collectors Items.Open Wed. Thurs. Sat.

Other limes By appointment76620(4

135 South Flnley Av«. Basking Ridge

I J

FOR SALEALTENBURG.ELIZABETH, N.J.Open dally til » sat. til 6Sunday 1 to i

Largest Piano and organ dealerfrom Maine to Florida

Baldwin warehouse saleNew Baldwin console

J995.00

Nine floors of pianosMason t, Hamlln, Knabe, Sohmer,Baldwin, Everett Kawal.Piano Rental Plan Available.

351-2000Altenburg Piano House, Inc.1150 E. Jersey streetElizabeth, N.J.

11-9 TF

CEMETERY PLOT (two burials)Graceland Cedar Section S300.Call 233-5611 8-24 TF

FIREPLACE WOODMostlyoak, guaranteed seasoned.Vi cord 150. delivered and stacked

Full cord $90.24 hour answering service

647-223610-12 TF

ARCHIE'S ICE SKATEEXCHANGE

MyersvllleRd.Myersvllle.N.J.

New Jerseys LargestOpen Wed. through Sunday

lotos6471149

12-7 thru 1-4 5T

PETS FOR S M I

BT/S? A 2 * ° S M F ' r a r e P"PP'«-SIR, M " r e d «ol«w», champlon-273796jM- S15°- a t l d ""• C " "

AUTO FOR SALEVOLVO, 1974 station wagon. Veryclean, yellow. AC, PS. AM-FU,S ? ^ w n e r ' M'<H» ml., 2 snows,»,300. Phone 322-5403 12-7 2T

AUTOS FOR SALE

U7S THUNDEItaiftD. Loaded.Sllverlux group. Air conditioned,cruise control, tilt wheel, six-waypower seat, reclining passengerseat. 4 wheel disc brakes, elec-tric defrost, AM-FAA stereo radio,power antenna, electric doorlocks, electric window openers.AAlchelln tires. Low mileage.Asking S4400. Call 379-5863. Satur-day or Sunday between noon and3 p.m.

Plymouth Duster, 1973. Air,power steering, power brakes,good condition. Extra tires. SI200245-2341

HELP WANTEDSALESPERSON

N.Y.S.E. Industrial Waste Collec-tion and Disposal Co. Primaryarea Is north and central NewJersey, Includes car and ex-penses. Salary to ISM. Office InClark, N.J. Call 3827575.

Toadvertise

in the

Leader

Call

232-4407

HELP WANTED

K s, An Jewelry. Detail sales'*person. 25 hrs-week — (3.00perhr. 15c per mile. 493-3277

12-7 It

Bookkeeper — full charge. Ex-perienced, benefits, salary open.Call Mrs. Bovenkerk, WestfieldPresbyterian Church. 2330301

Part time Inside sales to assistwith market analysis. Technicalbackground useful. One or twodays per week. Westfield location.Please submit a brief resume andweekdays available to: SalesMgr. P.O. Box 290, Westfield, N.J.

NEW FACES for AdvertisingPromotions In Commercials, Con-ventions, Fashion, Narrators,Trade Shows. Interviews thisWon. to Frl. 12 to t PM, Studio 404— 225 West 57th Street, New YorkCity —Fourth Floor. 11-2 13T

Pottery Instructor, Wednesdays,4:30-6 p.m. Call Claudia ClantonWestfield YMCA 233270O

MATURE ADULT needed towatch two school boys from 3 to 6p.m., Monday through Friday,-plus school vacations. High schoolvicinity. Call atler 6:30 p.m.233-4157 8-10 TF

HELP WANTEDVAN DRIVERS

Part time position, 5 hours perday, 5 days per week to drive18-passenger van from Spring-field area to Hunterdon Occupa-tional Center In Flemlngton.Clean driving record essential.Special license required. Willassist with training to obtainlicense. Pay rate $5. per hour.Begin early January. ContactCharles Bauman, Asst. Supt-Unlon County Regional HighSchool, Dlst. No. 1, 841 MountainAve., Springfield 07081 376-6300

An Equal Opportunity-Affirmative Action Employer

The Greater Wesltleld YM-YWH AIs looking tor afternoon Instruct-ors for teaching woodwork, hamradio, chemistry, magic, sports,ballet, typing. Are you skilled andexperienced with children andyouth? Call 232-5514.

CAM tMIPCRt WANTCD 1H-72*

WOMAN COMPANION neededfor lady. Top salary, live In, 5 dayweek. Must drive. Reply to Box 36co Wesifleld Leader. 50 Elm St.,Westlleld, N.J. 12-7 2T

Mature person to fit children'sshoes. Part time. Will train.C«s1l« Sootery2337172 11-30 2T

ACCOUNTING

Union County CPA firm seekingexperienced personnel. Junior,seirilsenlor and senior Iwels.Send resume to Box 21, WesfleldLeader, 50 Elm St., Westfield,N.J.07090. . 7-20 TF

Italian Americans Interested IMountainside UNICO are Invitedto a complimentary dinner onTuesday, December 12th at 7 PM,at Howard Johnson Restaurant,Rt. 22, Springfield, N.J. For Res,Ph. Joseph Vlsceglla 2338122.

ServicesUNeed

CONSTRUCTION ESTIMATE

Expert mason, carpenter, steps,patios, garage, plastering,plumb., emergency repairs of atkinds, ornamental railings, fireplaces, designed & constructedelectrical, metal cellar doors,insulation, roofing, painting. Freeestimates — 24 hours. ACESERVICE — 233-S121

11-22 TF

TREE SURGEONSSCHMIEDE TREE EXPERT CO

Complete Modern Tree Serv letState Certified Tree Expert

Insured ServicePhone 322-9109

85 TF

SUBSCRIBE NOW TO

THE LEADERWESTFIELD LEADERSO ELM ST.

Send to:

Address. .Apt. No..

City State Zip

Bagin Subscription 19 . . .

ONE YEAR JUST $8

TreatmentFirst supplies of

'Timoptic'+ . a newprescription drug thatresearchers say will be amajor advance in Ihetreatment of glaucoma,became available to oph-thalmologists in the UnitedStates Oct. 2.

The drug, recently ap-proved by the Food andDrug Administration, wasdiscovered and developedby the Merck Sharp &D o h m e R e s e a r c hLaboratories, a division ofMerck & Co., Inc. Thegeneric name of the newophthalmic solution istimolol maleate.

Glaucoma, which can leadto irreversible blindness, iscaused by increased fluidpressure inside the eye. Inmost patients Timoptic' haseffectively controlledelevated fluid pressures.The unique benefit reportedwith the new drug is that,unlike presently usedglaucoma drugs, it causeslittle or no blurring of vision.burning or irritation of theeye or night blindness.These side effects arecommon and often in-capacitating with currentdrugs such as pilocarpineand epinephrine.

"Reports from clinicalresearchers, involvingstudies of over 1,000 patientsat 27 medical centers in theU.S. and abroad, convinceus that the new drug will bea major advance in treatingglaucoma, the leading causeof irreversible blindness inthis country," said Dr.Hubert C. Peltier, thecompany's medical affairsvice president.

Comparing 'Timoptic'with current glaucomadrugs, clinicians found thatin addition to effectivenessin reducing the build-up offluid pressure inside the eyeand offering a new level ofpatient acceptance, themedication controlled intra-ocular pressure with only asingle drop applied in theeye twice a day. and forsome patients once a day.Existing anti-glaucomamedications need to betaken as often as every sixhours.

Glaucoma is blamed forblindness in. some 66,000Americans at the presenttime, and in the U.S. affectsan estimated two millionpeople with varying degreesof severity. The disease is acondition in which fluidpressure inside the eyebuilds up. The pressurebuildup is painless andunless there is routineprofessional examination ofthe eye, the disease can bewell advanced before thevictim is aware of it,Uncontrolled, the diseasedamages the optic nerve,with the potential ofgradually destroying sight.

Blue Cross SeeksRate Increase

Blue Cross of New Jersey'is seeking a 13.1 per centincrease in its premiumrates for small group andindividual subscribers.State Insurance Com-missioner James J. Sheeransaid today.

Although Blue Cross had areserve of $33.4 million onJune 30,1978, and projects areserve of $49.5 million atthe end of the year,, italleged in its filing that thesmall group and individual

, lines of business are runningdeficits that will reduce thereserve to $42 million at theend of 1979.

The Plan also alleged thatthe inclusion of hospitals'indigent costs and bad debtsin the computation of BlueCross rates, which wasmandated by a recent law,will have an impact, not yetdeterminate, on, thereserves.

Although no decison hasbeen made on a publichearing, in the past BlueCross rate filings have, beensubjected to long andsearching scrutiny by the-Department of Insurance atpublic hearings in which theDepartment of the PublicAdvocate has participated.The result has been thatBlue Cross has receivedmuch less than it had askedfor and changes in coveragehave been made to holddown the cost of Blue Crossinsurance. The last increasefor Blue Cross took effectApril 1, 1977 and averaged '7.1 per cent instead of the19.1 per cent the Plan hadsought.

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-THE WE87T1ELD (SJ.) LEAKER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1878 ?%fe IT

•»»•

Social and Club News of the Westfield Areai_.'-»«. :mw » • • • • • • « - "m- • ^ - - - - - - . . - - - - • • • M* - - y m r -,«• . „ . ,r> ••>• i t -» • - •mm' I t J ^ .rarg- a c

Joan Sullivan

Joan SullivanDuncan Savage,Plan June Rites

Mr. and Mrs. John J. Sullivan of 20South Wickom Dr. have announced (heengagement of their daughter Joan, toDuncan Edwards Savage, son of Mr. andMrs. Robert E. Savage of 683Shadowlawn Dr.

Miss Sullivan, a graduate of WestfieldHigh School, received a bachelor ofscience degree in nursing from RussellSage College. She is currently employed'as a critical care nurse at Mount Sinaillosptal in Hartford, Conn.

Mr. Savage, also a graduate ofWestfield High School, attendedRens-selaer Polythechnic Institute. He iscurrently a second year student at theAlbany MedjcaLQollege, Albany, N.Y.

A June wedding is planned.

Speaker's Bureau to Address LeagueThe Battered Women's

Speaker's Bureau of (heNational Council of JewishWomen will address IheLeague of Women Voters ofUnion on Monday.

• The Bureau, staffedprimarily by members ofNCJW's Greater WeslficldSection, handles referralsfrom community groups., toinform the public aboutissues involving batteredwomen.

An estimated 10,00<battered women live inUnion County. Due toshame, ignorance and fearwife abuse is the most un-der-reported crime in Ihenation. Wife beating is aphenomenon that cutsacross all cultural andeconomic lines. The battered woman becomes avictim, not only physicallybut emotionally. The un-predictability of herbeatings, the concern of herfamily's welfare and herchronic level of depressionlead her deeper into a life offrustration.

Throughout the nationsupport systems areavailable in Ihe form ofemergency housing, 24-hourhot lines, rap groups andreferral services.

The 35 minute presen-tation by NCJW's Speaker'sBureau explores the legal,historical, psychologicaland societal issues of theproblem of battering. Theeffects of domestic violenceon children is outlined andpractical information isgiven about shelters, hotlines numbers and coun-seling resources.

NCJW's Speaker's Bureauwas launched as a result of ayear-longstudy by.the Wesl-field Section which con-

Woman's ClubChristmas Tea

The traditional Christmastea and open house formembers and prospectivemembers of the Woman'sClub of Westfield will boheld on Monday at the club-house from 2 to 4 p.m. Thecharm of the clubhouse willbe enhanced by the Christ-mas decorations which arealways an outstandingfeature of this holidaycelebration. Members of theexecutive board will behostesses for this gala lea.

Background music will beprovided by ThomasAnthony and MichaelLudlum. Anthony is aprivate teacher in NorthPlainfield of the classicalguitar and studied underAlexander Bellow, Ludlumis a teacher of the guitar atF a i f l e i g h DickinsonUniversity, lie studied withAlbert Blain in New Yorkand is also a songwriter.Both teachers have playedmany clubs and recitals.

Hadassah to MeetThe Westfield Chapter of

Hadassah will hold its nextmeeting on Monday, Dec.IB, at 12:15p.m., in the homeof Mrs, Lowell Yemin, 216Twin Oaks Terrace. Thebook "Letters to AnAmerican Jewish Friend"by Hillcl Halkin will bereviewed by Edith Sobel, aprofessional lecturer andbook critic.

The program wasarranged by vice-president,Mrs, Milford Blonsky. Thechapter president is Mrs.Stanley Daitch. All mem-bers and friends arewelcome.

Many people bel loved that acut could be cured by put-ting ointment on the weaponrather than the wound.

eluded that our com-munities needed ano r g a n i z a t i o n f o rdisseminating informationabout the battered womanissue.

A l t h o u g h N C J W ' sSpeaker's Bureau isautonomous, it frequentlyhandles referrals from theBattered Woman's Projectof the YMCA in Elizabeth toaugment the project'seducational program.

Since it was instituted inSeptember, the' bureau hassent representatives to

speak in graduate andundergraduate courses atKean College, the UnionCounty Council of PTA's andthe Woman's Auxilliary forthe Kearny PoliceDepartment.

NCJW's Speaker's Bureauis headed by Arlene Janis ofFanwood, Meg Zanger ofWestfield and Mimi Kinder-lehrer of Scotch Plains.Anyone interested in con-tacting the bureau for aspeaking engagementshould call Mrs. Kinder-lehrer.

Door Judging Next WeekDoors decorated for the

holidays will be judged nextweek in December by theart department of the JuniorWoman's Club of Westfield.The winners of this holidayivent will be announced in

this'paper.Doors are to be judged on

originality, theme, at-tractiveness and use of colorand design. Only the doorand the immediate area

around it will be considered.The Junior Woman's Club,

in the holiday spirit willcontribute $25 in the winnersname to the winner'scharity of their choice. Thecontest is open only to West-field residents. For furtherinformation, or to be surethat your home is notoverlooked please contactMrs. Shawn Cherewieh 1010Grandview Ave.

Players Hold Art Show and SaleThe Community Players

of Westfield will hold an Art

ihow and Sale at theirheater, 1000 North Ave. onSaturday from 10 a.m. to 4

p.m. and Sunday from 1

p.m. to 5 p.m.Scott Jacobs of Reflec-

tions on Canvas will sponsorthe show. Many variedartists will be representedand prices are veryreasonable.

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Ellen McManus

Thomas PfeifferTo Wed Nurse

This SpringMr, and Mrs. Thomas E. McManus of

Kidgewood announce the engagement oftheir daughter Ellen to Thomas C.Pfeiffer of Westfield, son of Mr. and Mrs.Alvin G. Pfeiffer.

Miss McManus is a graduate ofParamus Catholic Girls' Regional HighSchool and the University of Bridgeport,College of Nursing. Currently she isemployed by Montclair CommunityHospital.

Mr. Pfeiffer was graduated fromWestfield Senior High School and theUniversity of Bridgeport. He is em-ployed by theF. & M. Schaefer BrewingCo. of Fairfield, Conn, as a salesrepresentative.

A spring 1979 wedding is planned.

Club to Present Christmas ConcertThe Musical Club of

Westfield will hold itsDecember meeting in thesanctuary of IhePresbyterian Church at 1p.m. on Wednesday, inconjunction with theDecember meeting of fheWoman's Association of thechurch.

The program will include;i variety of music for theadvent and Christmasseason. Sally Schma-lenberger, soprano ofPlainfield, will sing Kt in-carnatus est from the ('minor Mass of Mozart, PieJesu by Gabriel Faure andcontemporary settings ofthe Magnificat by JohnBooth and Howard Vogel.She will be accompanied onthe organ by Howard Vogel,organisl at Calvary

Kpiscopal Church inSummil.

Marie Mereier. organistof Cranford. will playOlivier Messiaen's I.esBergers and ,J.S. Bach'sToccata in V major.

Dilys Smith, soprano ofNew York, will present agroup of songs by con-temporary and romanticcomposers, and will closewith Mein glauhiges llerzeof J.S. Bach. Anne Somarywill be at Ihe organ.

The program will con-clude with a lovely trio fortwo flutes and harp, desJeunes Ismnelites fromL'Enfance du Christ byHector Berlioz. FlutistsHelene Fireland and Bar-bara Jacobson will be joinedby harpist Kathleen Bride.

Ruth Boyer, hospitality

chairman for the meeting,will he assisted by DorothyMayo. Janice Irwin.Carolyn Holt, Betty Greeneand Circle seven from thechurch.

Wine andCheese Party

The Family andChildren's Society ofElizabeth, which supportsservices for child abuseprevention and familycounseling.is holding a wineand cheese tasting partyJan. 13 from 5-7 p.m. atAndrew Campbell's inHillside. The services of thesociety are available to allUnion County residents. Formore information on the !party, call Mrs. J.P. jGrowney of Hillside.

Nuptials Told of Claudia MarksClaudia Ann Marks,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Edward W. Marks of 945Beverly Dr. and Bricktown.was married Saturday toDr. Edwin L. Kugler ofSummit, son of Judge andMrs. Charles W. Kugler ofNew Bloomfield, Penna. andFortescue.

The 2 p.m. ceremony washeld in the chapel of thePresbyterian Church withDr. Theodore Sperdutoofficiating. A receptionfollowed in the churchlounge.

The bride made herwedding gown, a VogueParis original designed byChristian Dior. The gownwas in the Grecian stylewith a high, fitted waistline,pleated skirt, wide, wrist-length sleeves and an at-tached hood of white peauwith seed pearls. Shecarried a cascade of whitecarnations and baby'sbreath.

Mrs. Keith Plambeck ofWestfield was matron of

honor. She wore a brightgreen full-length dress in asimilar Grecian style. Shecarried a French Christmasbouquet of red andvariagated carnations.

Dr. Gary H. McVicker ofWestfield was best man. Thebride's brother, Reed K.Marks of Linden, ushered.Her son, Scott I,. Barnes,was ring bearer.

A 1970 graduate ofWestfield High School, MrsKugler also graduatedfrom Union College, whereshe was named to Phi ThetaKappa, and KutgersCollege. She is a member ofPi Mu Epsilon, the nationalmathematics honorary, andis junior membershipchairman of the Westfieldchapter of the NSDAR. Shewas formerly employed as acomputer programmer forNew York Life Insurance.

Dr. Kugler received hisbachelor of science degreefrom Dickinson College in1967 and his PhD. in 1975from Johns Hopkins. He is a

Baptist WomenTo Hold Tea

The annual ChristmasTea of the American BaptistWomen of Ihe First BaptistChurch of Westfield will boheld on Thursday, Dec. 14 at1 p.m. at the church. Theprogram this year willfeature the choir fromArthur I,. Johnson RegionalHigh School in Clark, underIhe direction of EvelynBleeke

Following the program,tea will be served by themembers of the boardheaded by Mrs. Fred WHunes, president

group head in the corporateresearch laboratories ofExxon Research andEngineering in Linden.

A rehearsal party wasgiven at the home of thebride's parents. Pre-nuptialparties were hosted by Mrs.Linn Sleesman and Dr. andMrs. Gary B. McVicker.

After a wedding trip toBermuda, the couple willreside in New Providence.

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Page 18: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

P»jo 18 THE WESTFIELI) (N.J.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 197»

p=9Ttyeir Favorite Friends

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A story by Beatrix Potter

For Christmas Cherubs

Of Peter Rabbit and

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To make a time of

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From a world of

stuffed animal Friends

Westfield232-4800open eve*

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The long blazer robe,classic in detail and tailor-ing, is perfect to button overanything or even nothingat all. The soft fleece robecomes in Sandcastle, TudorBlue and Ginger Peach.Honestly, can a woman askfor anything more?The crisp collar and flatter-ing fit is so attractive,especially when it's on arobe of lixpresso,- RoyalNavy and Red Red.

tn Sizes P.S.M.L,

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Something for EveryoneAt Unique Boutique

The fourth annual"Unique Boutique" of theJunior Woman's Club ofWestfield will be held onSaturday from 10 a.m. to 4p.m. at Roosevelt JuniorHigh School. The proceedswill go to the many charitiessupported by the club.

Craftsmen from all overthe state, over 40 in number,will be present to displayand sell their crafts. Some ofthe crafts will includewindchime mobiles of an-tique silver, designed byWindsong of Piscataway,Lapidary by KensleyThompson of Denville andthree-dimensional Polymerplaques created by NancyWainwright of Flemingtot).

Frank Bell will be there todisplay his child and en-vironmental photography as

well as A. Gregary of LongValley with the craft ofcutwork lampshades anddried rose arrangements.Pen and Ink graphics andfingerprint art will bedisplayed by J. Christmannalong with flemish flowersand fruit by J. Hanichak,and silhouettes by FranklynHansen of Maplewood.

A visit and a picture takenwith Santa Claus willhighlight the children's day.An entire section of theboutique will be devoted toholiday gift items that thechildren may wish to pur-chase for members of theirfamily.

There will be a holidaybake shop featuring manyitems especially designedfor holiday gift giving.

Kohler School BoutiqueThe mothers of Kohler

School at Winfield Park arehaving a ChristmasBoutique Dec. 9 at theCranford CommunityCenter.

Santa will be there from 10a.m. to 4 p.m. for free

pictures with your owncamera. There will be manyhomemade cakes andcookies, plants, stockingstaffers and decorations.

AH the profits will servethe Union County Unit forRetarded Citizens.

CHRISTMAS

from

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Buy an Interior Designer'sIdeas — consultation giftcertificates. Also, veryspecial accessories instock.

Tuesday through Saturday10 until S

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223 Elmer St., Westfield

Jane II. Annis Nancy Winkclman

Kevin and Christopher McCauley visit with Santa whowill be on hand at the Junior Woman's Club UniqueBoutique on Saturday from JO a.m. to 4 p.m. atRoosevelt. Craftsmen from all over the state will bepresent to display and selt their crafts.

Humanitarian to Be ChosenAt Kidney Fund Ball Friday

field and Jerome Eckenthalof Scotch Plains, co-chair-persons of the CandlelightBall, say Ihe Kidney Fundthis year again will honor aperson who has devotedmuch time and energy toraising monies for thecharitable organization. TheKidney Fund of New Jerseyhas no paid administrativeor secretarial help and usesall monies raised for thecare and treatment ofkidney patients.

The co-chairpersonsexpect this year's event tobe the biggest and mostsuccessful yet. Besides theHumanitarian award, theKidney Fund will give away;i tripforlwo to Puerto VallaArta.

The .festive CandlelightHall gets under way at 7p.m. with cocktails,followed by dinner anddancing. Bernard J. Mondiof Scotch Plains, recentlyinstalled as president of theKidney Fund, will preside.

The selection of IheHumanitarian of the Yearwill be one of the highlightsof the Fourth AnnualCandlelight Ball sponsoredby the Kidney Fund of NewJersey tomorrow at theChanticler in Millburn.

Some 400 persons areexpected to attend the an-nual event which raises

the care andof kidney

monies fortreatmentpatients.

Last year theHumanitarian award wentto Alan Turtletaub of ShorlHills, president of TheMoney Store, whose Jersey-based company took anactive part in the statewidecampaign to raise moniesfor the worthwhile charity.Turlletaub also was one ofthree persons at last year'sdinner-dance who donatedmonies for the purchase of ;idialysis machine whichcosts between $5,SOD to$G,000.

Anne S. Moore of West-

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Page 19: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Methodist Christmas Meeting"Getting Inside Christ-

mas" will be the theme ofthe afternoon program byMrs. Dale White (Gwen) atthe Christmas meeting ofUnited Methodist Women onThursday, Dec. 14.

The business session willbegin at 10:30 a.m. in theFellowship Room whenspecial reports will begiven. The Chrismon tree,decorated by members ofCircle 3, will be on display toopen the advent season.Luncheon is at 12:45 p.m.

Group singing of "LoveCame Down at Christmas"will open devotions at 1:30p.m. followed by thededication of pledges for1979 lead by Mrs. William C.Bornmann. Mrs. WilliamGilman and Mrs. George D.Toenes will sing "ChristmasSong" by Charles Gounod,after which Mrs. White willgive her inspirationalChristmas message.

Mrs. White was born inNebraska, daughter of aPresbyterian minister. Shetaught music in Iowaschools, where she met andmarried Dale White, nowbishop of the New Jerseyarea of the United MethodistChurch. She served as an

organist-choir director inseveral Methodist churches.Mrs. White, mother of sixgrown children, has aconcern for children andwas involved in tutorialprograms for seven years inWashington, D.C. and EastGreenwich, R.I. She servedas a staff assistant to a TitleI program in East Green-wich schools. She ispresently a member of theNew Jersey Area TaskForce on Child Advocacy forthe United MethodistWomen.

Mrs. White has served asa workshop leader in familyenrichment, communicationskills, value clarification,and shared leadership withher husband in marriagecommunication workshops.She has also been a worshipand retreat leader and isvitally concerned for theLaity and their need toparticipate in a personalministry and a Christianlife-style.

The program will con-clude with special music bythe Handbell Choir underthe direction of Mrs.William Burke.

Baby-sitting is provided.

Sausage Making HighlightsMiller-Cory Tour Sunday

Miller-Cory volunteer,Doris Simpson, will presenta program on colonialsausage making techniqueson Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m.at the Miller-Cory Museum.

Costumed docents willalso be on hand to guidevisitors through the 1740farmhouse and to demon-strate colonial cooking in

Provisional JuniorHelp Children

The Provisional Group ofthe Junior Woman's Club ofWestfield is hard at work

with their provisionalproject to be done for the

Children's SpecializedHospital in Mountainside.

The co-chairmen for theproject are Mrs. Henry Seayand Mrs. Kdward

Zadourian. The group willsoon present the hospital

with scenic play boardswhich the children can use

in various aspects of theirtherapy and play.

Natalie Best Paints Westfield's CharmConvinced there are

"many beautiful spots" inWestfield which capture thecreative eye, watercoloristNatalie Best has focused hercurrent show on portrayingthe charm of these settings.

Included in the exhibit,housed until the end of theyear at Juxtapose, 58 ElmSI., are paintings ofGregory's Pond with a regalquietness which marks thespot; the historic Presby-terian Church, a centrallandmark in the downtownarea; Echo Lake Parkscenes reflective of thepeaceful flavor it offers, andthe familiar Westfield trainstation where the architec-ture speaks of bygone days.

Nostalgia plays a part inBest's selection of a town-oriented exhibit. The 38-year-old homemaker-artisthas spent almost her entirelife in Union County and haslived in Westfield nearly adecade.

. "The works give us all achance to reminisce, torealize what Westfield of-fers in terms of scenic at-tractions," comments theB r i g h t wood s e c t i o nresident.

Best's talents lendthemselves to a wide arrayof creations, and she isknown particularly for herfavorite subject, seascapes.

"It's a real feeling to secthe expanse of water and thesky and to realize the in-significance of myself,"remarks Best in explainingher penchant for seascapeworks.

Most notable, in theopinion of a wide legion ofart enthusiasts familiarwith her work, is her color-blending adeptness, utilizedmost creatively in suchareas as the beauty of thesky.

Many of Best's morerecent attempts are keyedlo portraying persons, fromdungaree-c lad teensrepresenting modernfreedom, to elegant Vic-torian-era individuals.Personality and mood of thesubjects are central to herrepresentation of people,Best contends. The por-traits, as well as seascapes,are included in the Jux-tapose exhibit.

Best, whose art interestoriginated in doodlingduring a grade-school math

class, took up watercoloringseriously about eight yearsago under the tutelage ofCape Code artist DanielMcElwain.

A Penn. State alumna, shehas studied at the ArtStudents League, New YorkCity, and has taught art. Shehas exhibited at (he NewJersey Watercolor Society.Her works are in privatecollections in three con-tinents.

Best's all-encompassingshow at Juxtapose featurespaintings framed andavailable for sale.

r :

Natalie Best is exhibiting her paintings of the manybeautiful spots in Westfield at Juxtapose throughDecember.

the adjacent Frazeebuilding.

The Miller-Cory Museumis located at 614 MountainAve, and is open Sundaysfrom2 to 5 p.m., introducingvisitors lo a variety ofcolonial skills as it recreatesthe everyday life of the 18th

t f f i lyy

century farm family.

Mr. and Mrs. RobertHeinkel of Westfield an-nounce the birth of adaughter, Kathryn Christine(Katie), on Nov. 18 atO v e r l o o k H o s p i t a l .Maternal grandparents areMr. and Mrs. F.W. Sweeneyof Westfield and Mr. andMrs. A.O. Heinkel, also ofWestfield.

THE WESTFIELD (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER T, 1»W

Julie Habib, far left, with her cooking class, "EasySteps." Her recently published cookbook is nowavailable in Westfield.

Resident's Cookbook on SaleJulie Habib of Westfield

has completed andpublished her cookbook,"Easy Steps to GourmetRating."

The author was born andraised on the island ofTrinidad and lived inBelgium the past threeyears. As a result of the hercosmopolitan background,the recipes can bring someexcitement to cooking.

Wbile residing in Europe.Mrs. Habib traveled ex-tensively. She attended "LaVarenne, Ecole de Cuisine"in Paris for an advanced

course in French cooking.She also attended cookingclasses in Brussels, whileshe was giving classesherself.

She has jus! completedteaching a six-week' courseon international cuisine inher home, the theme being,"Easy Steps."

The cookbook will beavailable in Westfield atMade in America, WestfieldLiquors on Broad SI. andSomething Different.

Illustrations for the bookwere done by NatalieRotker.

Mr. and Mrs. John Sellino

Sellinos Repeat VowsIn Honor of 50th

Mr. and Mrs. John Sellinoof Westfield recentlycelebrated their 50thwedding anniversary. Thecouple was married Dec. 15,1928 at St. Mary's Church inPlainfield.

A marriage renewal masswas celebrated at St. Mary's'with the Rev. MichaelDesmond of Westfield of-ficiating. A papal blessingwas bestowed upon thecouple.

A party in their honor

was held at the Villa Romain Elizabeth. Among theguests were the couple'schildren, Mr. and Mrs. P.Viglianti of Westfield, Mr.and Mrs. R. C'orbisieri ofEdison, Joanne Roznowskiof Westfield, Mr. and Mrs.

John Sellino Jr. of ScotchPlains and Mr. and Mrs.Sam Sellino of Kdison. Thecouple have 12 grand-children and two greatgrandchildren.

N. Leonard JarvisAddresses NYU Alumni

N. Leonard Jarvis, wasthe guest speaker at thedinner-meeting of the NYUAlumni Club of Watchungheld Dec. 6 at The Somer-ville Inn. His topic was"The Women's Role inFamily Finances."

N. Leonard Jarvis isprominent in the field ofbanking and finance, havingbeen associated inmanagement, research andanalysis for a number ofwell-known brokeragefirms.

The Alumni Club ofWatchung is comprised ofgraduates from all of theschools from New York

Andrea Chenier Operalogue"Andrea Chenier" will be

performed by the New

Bridal Pictures

The Westfield Leaderwill puBlish pictures ac-companying weddingstories only If they aresubmitted within threeweeks after the marriage.Prospective brides areencouraged to make thenecessary arrangementswith their photographers.

Christmas At The Linen PlaceIs:

•Holiday Table Linens•Claire Burke Scents•Fingertip Towels Designed For The Season t•Gift Packages Created From Our Wicker Selection \•Scented Hangers•Crocheted Doilies•Football & Jogger Dolls•Tooth Fairy Pillows•14 K Gold-Plated Toothbrushes•Bed Organizers•Hooded Terry Robes (r.•Limoges Switchplates•Bath Pillows•Personalized Pillows•Eyelet Comforters•Ultra-Suede Placemats•Lucite Shower Caddies

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Of course our fine monogramming is always available.We will wrap, ship, and deliver.

THE LINEN PLACE102QUIMBYST,

WESTFIELD 232-6814Open MF 'til 9 'til ChristmasAll Major Charges Acceptad

Jersey State Opera onSunday evening, Jan. 7, atSymphony Hall in Newarkstarring Gilda Cruz-Romo,Giuseppe Giacomini andMario Sereni. Tickets arestill available through theNew Jersey State OperaOffice.

University, over 8,000 ofwhom reside in the greaterWatchung area.

BPW to MeetThe next meeting of the

Business and ProfessionalWomen's Club of Westfieldwill be on Tuesday at 6:30p.m. at Raymond'sRestaurant in Westfield.Gerry Poteet is in charge ofthe Christmas party.

Area women interested injoining the party or the clubare welcome to attend.Contact Mrs. Nora Wilson ofWestfield or Mrs. MyrtleSchadle at Elm TV andRadio.

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CLOTH COATS,LEATHERS, SUEDESAND SO MUCH MORE!Be sure to visit, too,Remington's Town &.Country department. Thereyou'll find coats and jacketsof the softest-ever learnersand suedes. Others of thefinest imported and domesticfabrics and those not-to-be-missed "Fabulous Fakes". Allof your Christmas dreamswill come true this year atRemington Fur.From $100 to $1250

F U R S And don't forget ourF O R HIM,exciting-Father'sTOO! Revenge" shop. Aunique collection of the finestin men's furs, suedes, leathersand imported rainwear.

flemington fur companyOPEN SUNDAY & EVERY DAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.NO. 8 SPRING ST., FLEMINGTON, NEW JERSEYOne of the Worlds Largest Specialists in Fine Fur3.

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Pl fe ZO THE WESTFIELD <NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY', DECEMBER 7, 1971

Christmas Boutique - Mrs. Linda Cameron and Mrs.Carol Davison complete preparations for the seventhannual Christmas Boutique at Covenant Christian Schoolin Fanwood today.

Covenant Boutique Today

02EvansAT-HOME' FOOTttEAK

Covenant Christian Schoolis celebrating the holidaystoday with their seventhannual Christmas Boutiqueand Luncheon from 10 a.m.to 9 p.m. at the new campuson I.aGrande Ave., inFanwood.

Mrs. [)oris Heyns,Westfield. and Mrs LinduCameron, Watchung. co-chairing the event, haveannounced that individualsand teams have in the pastyear assembled large stocksof gifts and craft items,sewing, knitting, crochetitems, even several largeheirloom handmadea f g h a n s C a n d l e s . |stationery, books. Christ- •mas wreaths and ornaments jare again offered

Festive favorite foods,home made soups, freshbaked breads. frozencasseroles, and otheredibles have been coor-dinated by Mrs. AudreyPeterson and Mrs WendyKingston, both of Westfield.

A colorful holiday gour-

met benefit luncheon will beserved at 12:30 by membersof the school choir under thesupervision of Mrs.Marianne Barker. Ticketsareavailableorat the door..

Previous editions of theCovenant ChristmasBoutique have been held atthe Grace OrthodoxPresbyterian Church and atthe American Legion Hall inWestfield.

Proceeds of the boutiquewill go to support specialprojects at the rapidlygrowing independent schoolwhich houses grades kin-dergarten through 12,teaching in a context ofChristian values.

It is believed the tuxedois so called from beingfirst worn at the TuxedoClub in Tuxedo, New York.

Dickens,and Evans.

T rvo ChristmasClassics.

$14.95

ENJOYING THEMSELVES • Mr. and Mrs. Walter Eckhart of Westfield. at right,enjoy pre-dinner buj{et at the 12th Annual Dinner-Dance sponsored by Senior Auxiliary0/Children's Specialized Hospital. With (he Eckharts are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bosland.Bosland is president of the hospital's Board of Managers. Proceeds of affair aredonated to the rehabilitation facility for physically handicapped children and youngadults.

Mountain Gardeners Make WreathsThe Mountain Trail

Garden Club of Mountain-side will meet on Tuesday atII a.m., at the home of Mrs.Howard Johnson. FriarLane, Mountainside. The

meeting will be followed bya Christmas pollucklunch-eon. There will also be ajudging of Christmas flowerarrangements membersmade for various rooms in

Mrss, Ms., or Mrs., - an exerting,romantic ambiance surrounds you.100% nylon. 5-13 S45

121 Quimby St.. WastfMd S Oloort Squar*. B«rnard*riila232-1131 766-7676

Op*n Mon. thru Fri. 'til 9 Op*n Mon. 'til 9

OFFICIAL GIRL SCOUT AGENCYCAPEZIO DANCEWEAR

A fine 14K gold monogram,available in 2 or 3 classicblock initials at shown, withor without tht .01V, pt.diamond to drats it up.Equally suiUbit for hit or h«rshirt collar, htr ntwlynarrowvd cuffs, his narrowarlapalf. her rolled onet.Or to plact whtrtvar fancydictates!

RARE

$4,000 $2,600

REGALi'

$9,000 $3,900

$9,000

UNIQUE

OVER FIFTY YEARS OF INTEGRITY

GARDEN STATE PLAZA • WESTFIELD • MORRISTOWNLIVINGSTON MALL • LINDEN • MONMOUTH MALL

Phone inquiries invited -2336900: VISA. MASTER CHARGE. AMERICAN EXPRESS

From Adiers extensive collection of unusual insert rings in full cut diamonds, sapphires,emeralds From $175 Prices may vary according to diamond weights Open eveningsduring December.

OVER FIFTY YEARS OF INTEGRITY

GARDEN STATE PLAZA • WESTFIELD • MORRISTOWNLIVINGSTON MALL . LINDEN • MONMOUTH MALL

Phone Inquiries Invited - 233-6900- VISA. MASTER CHARGE. AMERICAN EXPRESS

members' own homes andprizes will be awarded.• As in years past, the clubwill participate indecorating for the holidaysat both Hunnels Hospitaland the Veterans Hospital inLyons. Donations are againbeing sent to these in-stitutions.

In keeping with a holidaytradition of the club,members will be hangingwreaths at the MountainsidePublic Library, BoroughHall, Post Office, RescueSquad and Fire Depart-ment.

'Christmas Doorways'For Fanwood Women

Jan Taylor of Boonton,known to manyorganizations in the CentralNew Jersey area as the"Gal with the MagicFingers," will return bypopular request for theWednesday meeting of theFanwood Woman's Club atthe Fanwood CommunityCenter.

The program, "Doorwaysto Christmas," willdemonstrate Mrs. Taylor'soriginal conceptions ofoutdoor and indoor homedecorating with fresh, driedand other materials. Hersuggestions also cover giftand packaging ideas.

A former flower shopowner, Mrs. Taylor has

exhibited at New YorkColiseum shows, executedmagazine covers and servedas design instructor andsonsultant for amateur andprofessional florist.

Mrs. Taylor will donatefive of the pieces she willcreate and Mrs. Henry D.Wilson will auction them offat the close of the program.Proceeds will benefit theclub 's phi lanthropicprojects.

The hospitality committeefor special yuletide refresh-ments and decorations willinclude Mrs. Joseph Gorsky,Mrs. Francis Guterl, Mrs.Harold Station, Mrs.Richard M. Lea and Mrs.-Wilson.

Westfield Twig Aids HospitalWestfield Twig II, a

branch of the SeniorAuxiliary of Children's.Specialized Hospital, haselected new officers.

They are: Mrs. LaurenceMannino, president; Mrs.Robert Giegerich, vice-president; Mrs. RichardAllen, recording secretary;Mrs. Kenneth Burns,corresponding . secretary;and Mrs. Clifton Hudgins.treasurer.

Chairpersons selected forthe year are Mrs. HobarlCree, social chairman; Mrs.Fred Edling, volunteers;Mrs. William Taylor,publicity; Mrs. DavidJcssup, telephones; andMrs. Ken Cabarle, member-

| ship and hospitality. All areWestfield residents.

Westfield Twig II, now in

its third year, is a serviceorganization which donatedmore than 500 volunteerhours at the hospital lastyear, according to Mrs.Mannino. She cited Mrs.Allen for special recognitionbecause of her 40 servicehours.

Highlighting the twigevents this year was aSeptember barbecue withfood donated b y theProspector's Store, Wesl-(ield; music provided byJoseph Allen's Bluegrassgroup, and helium balloonsdonated by Castle Booteryof Westfield.

Now underway is afeasibility study by Twig IIof access to buildings by thehandicapped in the West-field area.

TWIG OFFICERS • New officers for Westfield Twig U of the Senior Auxiliary,Children's Specialized Hospital, Mountainside, are (from left): Mrs. Richard Allen,recording secretary; Mrs. Kenneth Burns, corresponding secretary; Mrs. LaurenceMannino, president; Mrs. Clifton Hudgins, treasurer; and Mrs. Robert Giegerich, vice-president.

Fourth AnnualUnique BoutiqueSaturday, December 9

10 am - 4 pm

Roosevelt Junior High School301 Clark Street, Westfield

Admission $1.00VISITSANDPICTURESWITHSANTA

CRAFTSMENBAKED GOODSCHILDREN'SBOUTIQUE

Junior Women's Club of Westfield

THIS HOLIDAY SEASONGIVE THE GIFT OF CREATIVITY

A GIFT •?& *vj| ;A .jjik : £CERTIFICATE FROM *J J M $J ^ 3

A Studio for the Performing Arts

New Winter Session Classes (Young People's Division)

Creative Dance For Children (Ages S-9) Begins Jan. 20

Creative Dramatics For Children (Ages 9-12) Begins Jan. 23

Acting For Children (Ages 6-8) Begins Jan. 22

Holiday Discounts Available

A Studio ror the Performing Arts1765 E«t 2nd StreetScotch Plaint, NJ .201-322^010

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Presbyterian Christinas TeaThe annual Christmas Tea

of the Women's AssociationwilJ be held Wednesday at 1p.m. A program ofChristmas music will bepresented in the sanctuary

• by the Musical Club ofWestfield who will be guestslater at tea. Those ap-nearing on the program areMrs. Michel Mercier,organist; Mrs. Frank C

Smith, soprano; Mrs. SallySchmalenberger, soprano;and Mrs. Howard Jacobson,flutist.

Mrs. John Ouderkirk willlead in devotions and alsoassist in the installation ofofficers for 1979.

Reservations and babysitting arrangements maybe made by calling Mrs.Dewey Rainville, II Kent PI.

Naturalists to Meet"Fun with Fungi" will be-

the subject of an illustratedslide program to bepresented at the meeting ofthe Echo Lake Naturalists'Club on Tuesday at 8 p.m.Allen Northup of the MorrisPhoto Color Club and theMorris County NatureSociety will narrate theprogram to be held at theCranford Health Center, 205Birchwood Ave.

Echo Lake Naturalists'Club will participate withthe Summit Nature Club

Audubon Christmas Counton Saturday, Dec. 16 andwill join with the WatchungNature Club in similaractivity on Sunday, Dec. 31.

Interested non-membersare invited to attend theTuesday meeting or to joinwith Echo Lake members inthe Audubon Bird Counts bycalling Ralph Maiwaldt,chairman of field trips.

Echo Lake derives itsmembership from UnionCounty and adjacent areas.

With the Collegians

Cadet Kenneth J.Ciarocca, son of Mr. andMrs, Louis Ciarocca of 1035Summit Ave. and a 1976graduate of Westfield HighSchool, is a member of theVirginia Military InstituteClass of 1980 and hasreceived his VMI class ring.

Mark Bechett, son of Mr.and Mrs. Gisbon N. Beckettof 253 Edgewood Ave., hasbeen elected president of theStudent GovernmentAssociation, College ofLiberal Arts, at DrewUniversity. A graduate ofWestfield High School, he isa senior at Drew, majoringin enonomics.

Robert Mark Tenenbaum,son of Mr. and Mrs. IrvingTenenbaum, 107 MarlboroSt., received his bachelor ofscience degree in physicaltherapy from the Universityof Kansas Medical Center,Kansas City, Kan. He alsoreceived his bachelor of artsdegree in sociology fromQuinnlpiac Col lege ,Hamden, Conn. He is a 1970graduate of Westfield HighSchool.

Elizabeth A. Myers,daughter o<'Mr. and Mrs.William A. Myers of 136North Euclid Ave., iscurrently enrolled as afreshman at JuniataCollege, Huntingdon,Penna. She is majoring inpsychology.

Ann G. Sloane, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Stanley L.Sloane, formerly of West-field, has been elected to PhiBeta Kappa at DukeUniversity. She is a senior,majoring in psychology. Shegraduated from WestfieldHigh School in 1975.

E l i z a b e t h Y o u n g ,daughter of Mrs. FrankYoung of Westfield, servedas song- leader of the fresh-man class for the annualCedar Crest College SongContest. Song Contest is ahighlight of ParentsWeekend at the Penn-sylvania Women's College.' Susan McNamara, niece

of Nettie M. Hafer of 666Boulevard, has been namedto "Who's Who AmongStudents in AmericanUniversities and Colleges"at Westminster College. Sheis a senior majoring inmusic education. In additionto "Who's Who," MissMcNamara is a member ofKappa Delta sorority and amember of Mortar Boardfor the 1978-79 school year.

John Cloyes of 535 DudleyCt., a senior at theUniversity of New Hamp-shire, recently participatedin the University ofColorado's Semester at Seaprogram. He joined othercollege students on the SSUniverse and toured 13countries around the world.While at sea, the studentstook classes on board theship which was set up inclassrooms. When in port,students were free' to traveland participate in Semesterat Sea programs. John ismajoring in business ad-ministration.

Michael Derrey, son of

Mr. and Mrs. Robert F.Derrey of 24 CanterburyLane, has recently pledgedthe Sigma Pi fraternitychapter at, St. LawrenceUniversity.

George Risse, son of Mr.Walter E. . Risse of 714Mountain Ave., has beenelected dorm senator in theStudent GovernmentAssociation, College ofLiberal Arts, DrewUniversity. A graduate ofWestfield High School, he isa sophomore.

Two Westfield residents,Roger Huff of 977 WoodmereDr. and Kenneth LeCroy of503 Carleton Road, havebeen accepted by LincolnTechnical Institute, Union.Both are 1978 graduates ofWestfield High School.LeCroy is studyingautomotive technology,while Huff is enrolled in theinstitute's air conditioning,heating and refrigerationcourse.

Anne Marie Bizink, 1148Tice Pl.m. has enrolled as amember of the freshmanclass at Saint. FrancisCollege of Pennsylvania. Agraduate of Westfield HighSchool, she is majoring insocial work. She is thedaughter of Mr.. and Mrs.George P. Bizink.•Jennifer S. Guthrie,

daughter of Dr. and Mrs.Roger T. Guthrie of RutgersCourt, is currentlyrehearsing orchestral musicwith the Converse OperaWorkshop for the upcomingpresentation of Gluck'sOpera "Orpheus." She isplaying bass in the or-chestra. She is a senior atConverse majoring in musiceducation and performance.

Steven Spirko, son of LoisSpirko of 1289 WoodsideRoad, is enrolled for the falltrimester at OklahomaState Tech. He is enrolled inbaking.

David W. Pry or of 731First St. has pledged PhiKappa Theta fraternity atWorcester PolytechnicInstitute in Massachusetts.

Karen List, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Robert List of233 Jefferson Ave., is one ofthe four student teachersfrom Bucknell Universityteaching abroad. She isteaching e l e m e n t a r ystudents at the AmericanCommunity School inWimbledon, London,England.

Jim Tilton, son of Mr. andMrs. Robert J. Tilton of 1435Grandview Ave., recentlywon the American Instituteof Chemical Engineerssophomore award at theUniversity of Delaware. Hewas presented the award atthe dinner meeting of theDelaware Valley Section ofthe AICHE in Philadelphia.

Berklee College of Musicstudent Marie Jocobson,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.John Jacobson of 12 Man-chester Dr., is a featuredvocalist in the BerkleeConcert Choir. She ismajoring in professionalmusic.

i

Opens Philatelic Sales WindowPostmaster Anthony F.

Sarzilloof the Cranford PostOffice announced theopening of its philatelicsales window (his week.This window will providefull service to the stampcollector who is interested inU.S. Postage stamps. ThePhilatelic outlet will stock afull supply of all itemsnormally available only

from the philatelic sales unitm Washington. These willinclude all U.S. Com-rnemoratives issued duringthe past two years, and all

new issues as they becomeavailable. Also availablewill be a full line of em-bossed stamped envelopesand special issue postalcards.

-THE WE8TFIELD (NJ.) LEADER, THUBSDAV, DECEMBER 7, »IS P«#» M

NEVER

ON

SUNDAY(Because we believe everybody deserves a day of rest)

BUT. , Shop Milady's

Mon.thru Fri.'til 9 P.M

Sat. 'til 6 P.M. for these

holiday Gift Ideas: Warm gowns

Robes and Pajamas, Sportswear Co-ordinates,

Nylon Sleep wear, Gloves, Hats, Scarfs,

and Accessories.

167 EAST BROAD STREET, WESTFIELD, N.J.233-2758

Shop Daily Till 6 P.M./Thurs. Till 9 P.M./ Sat. Till 5:3O P.M.Handt-Charge .MastgerCharge Bank Americard

Page 22: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

THE HXSTFUXO (NJ.) LEADER, THL'BSDAY, DECEMBJCB T, 1*78-

DO THEYDELIVER?

Phone ahead and save. ) New Jersey Bel

Elizabeth Topham Kennan (center) formerly of Westfield and now president of MountHotyofee College. South Hadley. Mass.. was greeted by her Westfield High Schoolprincipal, Albert Bobal. and guidance counselor, Vincent Vashville, at a dinner forNew Jersey alumnae Nov. 9 at the Governor Morris Inn, Morristown. She graduatedfrom Mount Hoiyoke in 1960 summa cum laude. earned masters and doctorate degreesIn medieval history and taught at the Catholic University of America, Washington.D.C. before returning to Afounf Hoiyoke as president last September. She is married toMartin Budd, an attorney, and has an eleven year old son.

Silhouettes atBoutique

To most people, asilhouette is a charmingblack and white cutoutwhich can be recognized asthe likeness of an endearedperson or a pet. FranklynHansen, who has beencutting them for over 40years tries to portray in hissilhouettes, the individualityof each subject.

He is often told thatexamples of his work arestill hanging on the walls ofhomes where children werehis subjects, have grown upand established families oftheir own. These silhouetteswill probably becomecollector's items.

Come and see FranklynHansen at the WestfieldJunior Woman's ClubUnique Boutique onSaturday from 10 a.m. to Ap.m. at Roosevelt JuniorHigh School.

New PhotoSociety Formed

T h e W e s t f i e l dPhotographic Society willmeet on Wednesday at 8p.m. in Room 1 of theWestfield YMCA. Thisnewly formed club isdesigned for sharing theenjoyment of photographywhile developing photogra-phic skills through a varietyof creative programs.Anyone interested inphotography and in joiningthe club is invited to attend.

'Nutcracker' at Paper MillThe New Jersey Ballet's

production of "The Nut-cracker," described by onecritic as having the "warm,old-fashioned atmosphere ofa Christmas card," will bepresented in 16 publicperformances, two on-school-time, at the PaperMill Playhouse in Miltburn,Dec. 20-29.

The New Jersey Balletproduction will feature acast of 75. headed byprincipal dancers EmiliettaEttlin and Barry Leon as theSugar Plum Fairy andCavalier, who will alternateduring the season with guestartists Helen Douglas andB u r t o n T a y l o r .Tchaikovsky's score willbe conducted by FrancescoFerruecio Gian'ini.

Choreographed by JosephCarow and George Tomal.and produced by DirectorCarolyn Clark, the NewJersey Ballet productiongives dramatic impetus to

dance and music with a fullscale treatment of set andstage effects implied in thescenario. Falling snow andmisty cloud banks, a livingroom that disappears and aChristmas tree that growsare some of the at-mospherics employed.

Associate Director Carowrecalls, "In 1971 when wedecided to do 'The Nut-cracker,' we made up ourminds to do it all the way!"Since then, the New JerseyBallet production hasplayed to 115.000 viewers.

Wednesday, Dec. 20 at 8p.m. will be the opening ofNew Jersey Ballet's 8thseason of 'Nutcracker' atthe Paper Mill. Per-formances on Dec. 21 and 22will begin at 4 and 8 p.m., onDec. 23 at 3 and 8 p.m.. onDec. 24 at 3 p.m. only, andon Dec. 26-29 at 3 and 8 p.m.Tickets are available at thePaper Mill box office.

Make an ExpensiveVest for Gift Giving

Rake and Hoe Workshop

TheNew Jersey Ballet has scheduled IS performances of"The Nutcracker" at the Paper Mill Playhouse Dec. 20-29.

Start Baking HolidayCookies Now

FAR BROOKSCHOOL

52 Great Hills RdShort Hi Us 07078

Applications ate being acceptedfor Fain 979

For information call 379-34+2

IN COMPLIANCE WITH AMERICAN LAW AND INAFFIRMATION OF ITS ESSENTIAL COMMITMENT TONOURISH CHILOflEN FOR LIFE IN A WORLD OF INFINITEDIVERSITY, FAR BROOK SCHOOL WELCOMES ANDACTIVELY SOLICITS APPLICATIONS FROM FAMILIESOF ALL ETHNIC. RACIAL AND CULTURAL TR AOlTlONS

Far Brook School is a non sectarian day schoolwhose core curriculum is ine exploration of history and•r tv Openings are anticipated in ihe nursery andKindergarten programs and in grade 1-9 Applications arenow Being accepted Admission testing will be conductedin January and FeDruary

Uv: Carolyn Y. llealoySenior County Homo

KcmioniislThis year is the year of the

vest, and if you want a giftlhat will really please, makea suede or leather vest. It is-surprisingly easy to makean expensive vest in a shorttime.

Select an imitation or realsuede to work with. Docheck the care instructionsfor either suede you select.Most all imitation suedesare quite washable, andsome real leather is nowbeing marketed ;iswashable.

weights to keep the patternfrom moving. Cut out withsharp shears.

The delight in sewing withthese non-raveling fabrics isthat you can either lap seamallowances and top-stitch ina double row, then trim backto the stitching; or if at-taching a front and backfacing, place wrong sidestogether and stitch on theseam line down Ihe front,across the bottom andaround the neck. Trim Ihetwo layers of fabric back tothe first row of stitching.Additional rows of stitchingcan be added.

When working with theseBefore cutting out either i dense fabrics, use polyester

type of material, if it is i thread both top and bottom,washable, wash it first to ""remove excess finish

Place the pattern on the

;in all-purpose needle, and 9-10 stitches per inch

If buttonholes ;ire to bemade, use a maching madetype. Remember, vests formen button left over right,and those for women bullonright over left.

GREATHOLIDAYFEAST

fabric and make certain thrtop of all pieces are goingtoward the same end.

Don't try to pin the pat-tern down: use small

Rahway Honors VolunteersThe Board of Governors of

Rahway Hospital will honorauxiliary volunteers duringan awards luncheonceremony on Tuesday, Oct.19 at noon.

The luncheon, which isbeing held at the GranCenturions in Clark, is tohonor active auxiliary

niversary this year,operates the Rose Tree GiftShop and the Snack Bar atthe hospital • solely onvolunteer power. Membersof the auxiliary alsovolunteer their time to takecare of baby photos and thenursing scho la r sh ipprogram. Twig members

By: Donna PaterekKxtension llomr

KconomlstThanksgiving is over and

now would be a good time tostart making your holidaycookies. Proper storage ofthese cookies are essentialto maintain the freshness ofIhe cookies.

Store soft cookies in acontainer with a tight-fittinglid so that (he cookies slaymoist. Bars and squaresshould be kept in the metalpan in which they werebaked and covered" tightlywith a lid or foil. If cookiesdo begin to dry out, a fewslices of npple or orange inthe cookie jar help mellowand moisten the cookies.Remove the fruit after oneor two days.

Store crisp cookies in acontainer with a loose-

Club DepartmentsMeet Jointly

New members will jointhe international affairsdepartment of the Woman'sClub of Westfield in an inter-national pol luck luncheonon Wednesday at 12:30. •Their guests will be Ihemusic department mem-bers, who will entertain witha program of Christmas Imusic and will also lead in jthe traditional candk" Ilighting ceremony. Mrs. iPaul M. Edmunds ischairman of the in-ternational affairs depart-ment.

fitting cover. Soft and crispcookies should never bestored together. Crispcookies can be freshened byheating them briefly in theoven before serving.

Most cookies, baked orunbaked, may be frozen.Frozen dough stays fresh upto six months. When readyto use, just thaw, slice andbake. Baked cookies can bestored in the freezer up to 12months, in freezer bags.When ready to serve, thawin the freezer wrappings.

The Rake and Hoe GardenClub of Westfield will holdits December meeting at theYMCA on Wednesday at12:45.

After a short businessmeeting there will be aChristmas workshop atwhich members will maketake home tablearrangements. Ftowers willbe provided by the flowerarranging and programcommittees.

Hostesses for the day will

be Mrs. Vincent J. CookeMrs. Sidd Kravitz, MrsStephan B. Moran, MrsArthur Macaulay and MrsRobert Stanton.

Under the chairmanshifof Mrs. Grant Risch, theCommunity Pro jec t sCommittee will decorate foiChristmas at LyonsVeterans Hospital. UniorCounty Cerebral PalsyCenter and John E. RunnellsHospital.

'Holiday Potpourri'at Garden ClubMembers of the Garden

Club of Westfield will holdtheir Christmas meeting onTuesday at the Woman'sClub at 1 p.m.

Mrs. Charles H. Rohmannof Glen Rock is the guestspeaker. Her subject"Holiday Potpourri" is amost interesting yuletideprogram. Mrs. Rohmann isfirst vice-president of theGarden Club of New Jersey,chairman of the FlowerShow School and is a veryprominent lecturer.

Hostess chairman is Mrs.William J. Degnen. She willbe assisted by Mrs. WilliamC. Linn, Mrs. Allen R.Malcolm, Mrs. Thomas B.Thorsen and Mrs. Walter E.Waddey.

Flower arrangements thismonth in the library will bedone by Mrs. Joseph Davis,

Mrs. Vernon Baker, Mrs.Kenneth Hansen and Mrs. C.Fred Sitzler.

The Myra Brooks JointWorkshop will resume in thespring on March 27.

Tullis'on CollegeCommittee

Har t wick C o l l e g emaintains a Parents'Executive Committee tohelp in the planning of manycollege activities. This yearMr. and Mrs. Robert Tullisof Wesl field are members ofIhe committee. Their sonJonathan is a sophomore atllarlwick.

As committee members,the Tullis' are involved withplanning Parents' Day,student recruitment, andthe parents fund.

volunteers and (wig | volunteer their services by

For the holiday season, for lunch, for supper, for your enjoyment, aGREAT HOLIDAY FEAST?

BEGIN: with your favoriteselec«onsfrom our service salad bar, choose fromtossed salad, lettuce wedge; octipn slices, pickled beets, three bean salad,potato salad, macaroni' »l*cj, otfe slaw, cucumbers, corn relish, pickles,olives, peppers. All with your choice of dressings. Your friendly waitress wiltserve you your salad selections, plus

SHRIMP, about one quarter pound of cocktail shrimp in the shell withcocktail sauce and crispy crackers.

SLICE your own loaf of our hot bakers bread with whipped butter.

CHOOSE your favorite entree from a list of over twenty items: Shrimp,Scallops, Flounder, Bluefish, Prime Rib, London broil. Steak, VealParmigiana, Chicken 3 ways, Calves Liver arid Steak & Lobster. Your choiceof potato and vegetable.

QRtNK a glass of Draft Beer, or Glass of Wine, Sangria, 8urgundy, Chablis,Sauterne or Rose, or Coffee, Tea, Milk or Soda.

j p IT OFF with one of Geiger's Homemade Desserts: Apple, Pumpkin,Cherry, Blueberry or Lemon Meringue Pie, Ice Cream or Cheesecake.

Geiger's G R EAT HO LI DAY F EAST is priced at only two dol lars over theregular entree price, prices start at S6.50 for the Great Holiday Feast andaverage less than S9.00. Some itemssuch as lobster are higher.

Geiger's Luncheon menu offers sandwiches and salads.Geiger's is open from 11:30 till 9 prr. Monday through Thursday, 11:3O

till 10 pm Friday and Saturday, Sunday from Noon till 9 pm. Full menu,whole and half portions, cocktails, children's menu, major credit cardshonored.

RESTAURANT 233-2260Mon.-Thun. 11:30 to 9

Fri.-Sat. 11 to 10Sunday 12:00 to 9

COFFEE SHOP233-3443

8 to 9 7 dayi

BAKERY & PRODUCE233-3444

8 'til 9 7 d«y«

OPEN 7 DAYS • 560 SPRINGFIELD AVE., WESTFIELD, N J .

members. Those receivingawards will be volunteerswho have recorded 100 hoursor more of service.

According the ShirleyLevitzky. president of theauxiliary, and LucilleSprowls, chairman of theawards committee, theprogram will begin with aluncheon and be followed bythe awards presentation andentertainment by the GladRag Music Company, athree-piece group.

Those auxiliary volun-teers being honored formore than 2,000 hours ofservice will have theirnames put on a special-plaque in the hospitalconference room.

The auxiliary, whichcelebrated its 60th an-

Hospital SeeksVolunteers

Volunteers come toMuhlenberg Hospital,Plainfield, in all shapes,sizes, ages and both gen-ders; the important thing isthey do come.

"Muhlenberg's volunteerprogram is constantly in-creasing and expandingwith the needs of thehospital," explained AnnieLaurie Cureton. director ofvolunteer services. "And,our need for additionalvolunteers grows steadily,"she continued.

Additional volunteers areneeded to work during theday, during the weekendsand in the evening. Servingas couriers, messengers,clerical assistants, waitingon tables in the ServiceShop, preparing materialsfor sterilization, helping tostaff Tel-Med, volunteersprovide valuable assistanceto hospital personnel andhelp with the hospital'sround-the-clock functions.

"Now that schools areopen, we hope more com-munity residents willconsider volunteer work atMuhlenberg," Miss Curetoncontinued. "Individualsinterested in becomingMuhlenberg Hospitalvolunteers should contactthe volunteer departmentbetween the hours of 8:30a.m. and 5:30 p.m., Mondaythrough Friday," MissCureton said.

sewing and makingceramics in their homes.

The Tasust birds are theduckhawks and the goldeneagles which dive at 180 mph(290 kph), World Book Encyclopedia reports.

VICTOR E. SABEH, D.P.M.Announces

The Opening Of Another OfficeFor The Practice Of

PODIATRY

At417 West Broad StreetWestfield, New Jersey

Cranford272-5110

Westfield233-0895

Five girls from the Westfield area have enrolled in the Middle School'of Kent PlaceSchool, Summit, for the 1978-79 academic year. From left to right, front row are CecUieDunlop, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Dunlop. Jr., Deer Path, Mountainside; andAlexandra Landrun, daughter of Mr, and Mr$. Ralph L. Landrum, Raymond St. backrow: Danielle Coleman, daughter of Mr.and Mn.Kenneth Coleman, Clark St., JenniferJackson, daughter of Mr. and Mn. Robert M. Jackson, Hillside Ave. and SusanCassidy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Lewis, Canterbury Lane.

Photo by William BurkeReceiving her certificate of membership in the Society of Distinguished AmericanHigh School Students from Dr. Donald S. Moore, senior warden of St. Stephen'sChurch, Plainfield, is Maren Burke of 728 Hanford PI. Looking on is The Rev. DonaldEdelmann. Nominated by her church for the society, Maren is a senior at WestfieldHigh School and is planning a career in the theatre arts.

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Westfield

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Page 23: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

C H U R C H S E R V I C E SOUB LAOV OF LOURDES

B. a CHURCHSO* Central Ave.,

MountainsideBev. MSIT. Raymond I.

FolludPastor

Ber. E4mrd *. EUcrtAwoclsto Pastor

lev. Jsha J. CassldTAssociate Futor

Bev. Ocnrd J. McGarrjrPaator Emeritus

Bister Marr J u t O'ConnorO.F.O.OD, Coordinator

Stater Gladys Hn(kM, C.8J.School Principal

Edward OcnYouth Minister

Edward TwomeyYouth Minister

Rectory 2SM1MSchool XS3-171T

BcUftow Education tSS-«l«*Convent C45-SMS

The Eucharist: Saturday,8:S0 p.m.; Sunday, 7, 8, 9:15,10:30, 12 noon; weekdays, Tand » a.m.; Holy Days, 7, S,10 a.m. - 8 p.m.; Novejia, Mas*and Novena Prayers - MondayS p m.

Penance: Saturday after-noon, 1:30 p.m. (CommunalService) Priest available atany other time on request.

Baptism: Parents shouldregister by calling rectory;Celebration of Sacrament asarranged.

Harrlage: Arrangementsshould be made as soon aspossible. Pre-cana is recom-mended alx months In ad-vance.

Ministry to the Sick: Priest*are available at anytime.

MOUNTAINSIDEOOSFEIi CHAPELU N Spruce Drive

(I Mock off Route H West)Mountainside, N. J. CMMChurch Office: Stt-MMIf BO anwer: IS1-M1S

Sunday, 8:45 am., Sundayschool for all youth and idult*(free bus service Is available,call for schedule of routes andpick-up times); 10:45 a.m.,pre-aervlce prayer meeting;; 11a.m., morning worship service(nursery care Is available); 7p.m., evening worship service.

Wednesday, 8 p.m,, mid-week prayer service.

FIRST HOTTEDMETHODIST CHURCH

AT wnrrnuiDP. anwwv *B«I w««raw

star, rhino B. DfettattehkVr. O. iajO Taaterk

Sunday, 9 a-m., worship ser-vice for children, youth andadults In Sanctuary; 10 sum.,church school classes for allagea; HUD a.m., worshipservice in the Hanctuaiy, Dr.Robert B. Goodwin, seniorminister, wUI preach at bothservices, there is nw-senoolchild care during the •erv-leea; 3:M p.m., children'sChristmas profram and playIB the Sanctuary; 8 p.m..Seventh and Eighth GradersCtMir, choir room; 8:48 p.m..Ninth through lJth anuteradiolr, choir loom; 7 p.m..Senior TJMTF meeting-, <*(Xrropra; T:80 p.m., JuniorVKYT meatlnt, choir room.

Monday. 8 pjn., pastor/par-ish relations committee, pas-tor's study,

Thursday, Mr:SO avm., regu-lar monthly meeting- of theUnited Methodist Women,Fellowship Room, businessmeeting will be followed bylunch In the sods] hall, theafternoon prorram will begin»t l:S0 In Fellowship Room.

Friday, 11:30 a.m., ltetho-•"•tSonior Fellowship, Fel-lowshlp Room.-..Sf-JWV. T pjn., SaturdayNlirht Supper Club, social

ST. LUKE A. M. CSOON CHURCH

500 Downer StreetWestfleld, New Jersey 07OM

Phone, XSS-Z547Parsonage:

S15 Osborne AvenoeWeatfleld, New Jersey 01OM

Bev, Alfred 8. Parker, Sr.Minuter

Worship service, 11 a.m.,Sunday morning"; c h u r c hschool; 9:30 ajn., Sunday.morning; trustee meetings,second Monday of each month.

THE PRESRYTERIANCHURCH

IN WE8TFIE1J)1M Mwnttala Art.

Mlslstef*.Dr. Theodore a SperaMe

Rev. Rkharsi L. SotthRev. Enes* G. Olsea

8:15, • and 10:30 sjn.,worship services — Dr. Theo-dore preaching on the subject,"Turning Soars into Stars,"leader of worship, Richard USmith, 10:30 Installation andordination of officers; 1:45a.m., Triangle Bible Class;9:15 «.m., Elisabeth NortonBible Class; 10 a-m., coffeehour; 9 and 10:30 a.m., film,"The Other Wise Man;" 10:30a.m., church school; S pjn.,Junior High Fellowship, West-minster Choir; 8:S0 pjn, Can-terbury Choir, Senior HighFellowship; 7 p.m., Over .40Singles; g p.m., A. A.

Monday, 3:13 p.m., JoyfulSound; T p.m., Boy ScoutTroop 72.

Tuesday, 8:30 am., Chan-cel Handbell Choir; 9:30 a.m.,Elizabeth Norton board; 11:30a.m., staff Christinas party;3:30 p.m., Chapel Choir andBoycholr; S pjn., Contact-We-Care.

Wednesday, t:30 ajn.. pro-gram staff; 11 a.m., churchstaff devotions; 1 p.m., Wom-an's Association program andChristmas tea; • p.m., A. A.

Thursday, 9:30 a.m., prayerChapel; S p.m., board of trus-tees; 8 p.m., Chancel Choir.

Friday, 1 p.m.. Wing DingClub; 8:30 p.m., A. A,

Saturday, 9 am., studygroup.

FAKWOODPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Marline aad Us Oraaa* Ares.,Funwood

The Rev. Oeerge L. B a tSealer Minister

The Rev. Edward C. EangeaaAaascUte Masitor

The Rev. DUae L. ZarageaaAssociate Minister

Sunday, 10 a.m., churchschool for pre-achool through7th grade; morning worship,Dr. Hunt preaching: "Watch-Ing and Waiting;" 11:15 a.m.,l l th and 12th grade churchschool class In Colvtlle Room;« p.m., Installation of theRev. Edward Zaragoia andthe Rev. Diane Zaragcoa a*associate ministers; 7 p.m.,Junior and Senior High YouthFellowships.. Monday, T p.m., 8th grade

church school clau in homeof Mrs. Laurence An<1r»-v*.9th gTade church school classIn home of John F. Cavicchia.

Wednesday, 7 pjn., 10thgrade clasa.

FIRST CONGREGATIONALCHURCH

US Elmer StreetWeetflcM, New Jerter

Dr. Jeka W . WUses>Rev. H. Mac? WhlteheadSunday, 9 a.m., conclusion

of course "Affirmation ofGrace" by Jack Lynea; 10a-m., morning worship andchurch school; 11 a.m., coffeehour in Patton Auditorium;11:15 a-m., l«yden Choir re-hearsal in the Chapel.

Tuesday, 10 a.m., Old Guardof Westfleld; 8 p.m., financecommittee meeting In theNeil Room; 8 p.m., Al Anonin Coe Fellowship Room.

Wednesday, 5:30 p.m., con-flrmation class; 5:30 p.m., 7thand 8th grade classes.

Thursday, 1 p.m., Women'sFellowship Christmas celebra-tion, carol sing followed bya Christmas tea in PattonAuditorium; 8 p.m., ChancelChoir rehearsal In PattonAuditorium.

ST. HELEN'S H. C. CHTJBCHRev. Thomas B. Meancy

PastorRev. WlDJam T. Morris

Assistant' Lambert's Mill Road

at Railway AvenueWestfleld, N. J. — XSZ-ltU

Masses are scheduled as fol-lows: Daily Man - 9 a.m.;Sunday Masses - Saturday at5:30 p.m. and 8:15, 9:30, 10:45,and 12 noon on Sunday.

GOSPEL SERVICESNon - denominational gospel

services will be held In theScotch Plains YMCA, Grandand Union Streets, Tuesdayevenings at 7:45.

HOL.YCBOMLUTHERAN CHURCH

M» Mewtato Awe,

Rev. Jeef ILYMIII,

tiMHiThursday, 10 a-m., Bible

class.Sunday, 8:30 ajn., Com-

munion; 9:30 ajn., FamilyGrowth Hour; 10:45 a.m., wor-ship; 5 -8 p.m.. Holy Crossfamily party.

Monday, 4 p.m., Confirma-tion I; 1:30 PJiu, eMere; •pjn., board of missions andsocial concerns.

Tuesday, 4 p.m., Confirma-tion n; » pjn, board oftrustees. _ ,

Wednesday, 4:30 p.m., CW1-dren'e Choir; 7:45 pjn., Ad-vent service; 8:45 p.m., AdultChoir.

TEMPLE EMAJTU-EL718 E. Brawl Straw)

WestfletiBaku, Charlee A. Kreleff

Cantor, Dea S. DeckerRaaM Heward SekUa-Semmes'

Eswcattoaal DimeterSraWr Ys t* Adviser

Friday, Shabbat eveningservice, music service offaith with Rabbi Kroloff andCantor Decker, parallel serv-ice for Gr. 1-4 with RabbiSeldln-Sommer, 8:15 pjn.

Saturday, Shabbat morningminyan, 10 a-m.; B'not Mitc-vah of Celeste Denersteln andJacqueline Tsttenbaum, 10:30a-m.

Monday, choir rehearsal, 8

Tuesday, Sisterhood Bibleclass, 9:30 a.m,; Men's Clubbridge, 8 p.m.

Wednesday, folk dancing,7:30 p.m.; Temple board, Sp.m.; beginning Hebrew, 8p.m.

Thursday, adult educationwith RabM Kroloff, 8 p.m.

ST. PACT/1EPISCOPAL CHURCH414 East Bread StreetWestfleld, N.«. *T«9»

The Rev. CssweiRichard t. Harsmaa

Th* Rev. Hurt UveaceedThe lev . Hertort L, UJUOTThe lev . Jeejs H. SeaereekT a.m., Holy Communion

during Advent, Monday thruSaturday.

Thursday, 1:30 ajn., Chris-tian Healing Service; 10:30ajn., Episcopal Churchwomenand Youth and Family Coun-selling S e r v i c e Christmasparty.

Friday, T:30 p.m., JZYC.Saturday, 8 p.m., Holy

Communion and sermon.Sunday, Second of Advent,

7:45 a.m., Holy Communion;8:45 and 10 a-m., Holy Com-munion and sermon; 11:30«,m., morning prayer and ser-mon; 12:45 p.m., Holy Bap-tism; 7 p.m., BETC.

Monday, 10 a.m., ecclesias-tical embroidery class.

Tuesday, 8 p.m., vestrymeeting,

Wednesday. t:30 ».m., HolyCommunion; S p.m., Biblestudy class.

CALVARY LUTHERAN1M Eastman St . CraafoN

Phoae: 17(-t41«Faster:

The lev. AneM J.Daalqnlst

Services of wonhip areheld at 8:30 and 11 a.m.Sunday .Church School Isheld at 9:45 am. for all ages.The Adult Forum Is held inthe lounge at the same hour,with Ralph Froellch, UnionCounty Sheriff, as guestspeaker. He will d i s c u s sUnion County jails and hisplans for Improvements. Dr.Sarah Pa try low, a member ofthe congregation, conducts anAdult Bible Study in thechurch office at 9:45 a.m. TheCongregational Advent Cele-bration for all members willbe held at 4:30 p.m. this Sun-day beginning with vespers,followed by a box sup]carol sing and Christmascrafts.

Today, Children's Choir, 4p.m.; Calvary Choir, 8 p.m.

Friday, ladles Cnrlstmajdinner, 6:30 p.m.

Monday, mother's morninggroup, 9:30 am.

Wednesday, Teen Choir,p.m.; prayer group, 8 p.m.

WILLOW OBOVEPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

1M1 RerMaa ReadSce«cfc Plata* N. I. t i M i

TWephsae: MS-M18Paeteri

Rev. JaUsa Akuaatssr, Jr.Thursday, 10 a.m., mid-

week Bible study, Romans; 8pjn., Chancel Choir rehears-al; 7:30 pjn., nurture com-mission meeting.

Friday, 7 p.m., open housefor senior high.

Sunday, 9:30 a.m., worshipservice, church school for allages; 9:30 a-m., adult study,"Tough Faith;" 10:30 a.m.,worship service, children'schurch for kindergarten thruGrade 4, nursery and cribroom open both services; 7p.m., Members in Prayer; 7p.m., Junior and Senior Fel-lowships; 8 p.m., missioncommission meeting.

Monday, 12:15 p.m., Wom-en's Association luncheon.

Tuesday, 8 p.m., steward-ship commission meeting.

Wednesday, 8 p.m., trainingfor the ministry, Romans.

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH11* Etoi Street

WestfleM. New JerseyDr. Bskert L, Harvey

(tun7s>Thursday, 9:30 a.m., Ameri-

can Baptist Women's board;1 p.m., American BaptistWomen's Circles; «:45 p.m..Lean Line; 7:30 p.m., Ameri-can Cancer Society; 8 p.m..Chancel Choir rehearsal.

Sunday, 9 a.m., ladies nightcommittee; 9:30 a m , churchschool; 10:30 a.m., morningworship, sermon by the minis-ter, Dr. Robert L. Harvey, onthe topic "Jingle All theWay," child care for pre-schoolers; 3 p.m., RarltanCluster Christmas vespers; 6p.m., youth groups.

Monday, 9:30 a.m., FoodStamp program; 8 p.m., Proj-ect SHARE Recycling com-mittee.

Tuesday, 9:30 a.m., Biblestudy; 10 a.m., Senior Citizensboard; 7:30 p.m., Choral ArtSociety; 7:45 p.m., board ofdeacons; 8 p.m., board oftrustees; 8 p.m., board ofmission.

FIRST CHTfRTH n » CHBIST,SCIENTIST

4 « East Jftuui StreetWeatfleld

11 a-m., Sunday Service.11 a.m., Sunday School for

students up to age of 20.11 ajn.. Care for very

young children.8:15 Wednesday evening

testimony meeting. Care forthe very young In the chil-dren's room.

The Christian Science Read-Ing Room, 118 Qulmby St. isopen to the public Mondaysthrough Fridays from 9:30 to5, Thursdays from 9:30 to 9and Saturdays from 10 to 1.All are welcome to use theReading Room and to attendthe church services.

ALL SAINTS'EPISCOPAL CHURCH

S59 Park AvenueScotch Flalas, New JerseyThe Rev. Jsfea R. Neilsoa

RectorThe Rev. Peter Turner, Aast

Second Sunday of Advent, 8am., the Holy Eucharist; 10a.m., morning prayer; 10a.m., church school, nursery1-8.

Monday, 9 a-m.. the HolyEucharist, Altar Guild meet-Ing; 7:30 p.m., B. S. Troop30; 8 p.m., Bible study.

Tuesday, 9:45 a.m., Over-Eaters Anon; 8:30 p.m., A.A.meeting.

Wednesday, 9 a.m., the HolyEucharist

Thursday, 9:45 a.m., Biblestudy; 12:30 p.m., Al-Anon; 8p.m., choir rehearsal.

Saturday, 9:30 a.m., New-comers.

WOODSIDE CHAPELB M t n t AvenoeFaawaed, N. J,

Sunday, 11 a.m.. Family Bi-ble Hour, Mr. Gordon Diegorywill be the speaker, Sundayschool at same hour, nurseryprovided; 7 p.m., the JuniorChoir will sing, message byMr. Ken Leahy.

Tuesday, g p.m., prayertime and Bible study.

Wednesday, 10 a.m.,.-ladieswork day; 7 p.m., ChristianService Brigade; 8 p.m., choirrehearsal.

Thursday, 8:45 p.m., PioneerGirls.

Friday, T:30 p.m., highschool activity.

Saturday, 7:30 p.m., collegeand career meeting.

For information call 889-9224 or 232-1525.

THE CATHOLIC CHURCHOF THE HOLY TROUT*

Rev. Robert T. LennonPastor

Bev. MstT.Charles B. MurphyPaator - Emeritus

AssistantsRev, Michael Desmond

Rev, Robert J. HarringtonRECTORY!815 First Street Mt-SIST0. C. D. Office Z3J-743SGrammar School .... 23S-4MM

Sunday Masses: 6:45, 8,9:15, 10:30 and 12 noon.

Chapel Masses: 9:30.Italian Mass: 11 a.m.Saturday Evening Masses:

5:30 and f p.m.Dally Masses: 7, 8, and 9

a.m. (9 a.m. omitted duringJuly and August).

COMMUN1TTPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Meeting Honse LaneMountainside, New Jersey

MinisterThe Rev. Elmer A. TalcottOrganlat and Chelr Dtreeter

fame* .<>. IJttl*Thursday, 7:15 p.m., Junior

Choir rehearsal for Grades4-8.

Sunday, 10:30 ajn., mom-Ing worship with Rev. Talcott

j preaching; 10:30 a.m., church! school for nursery throughJ eighth grade; 6:30 p.m., Jun-

ior Choir rehearsal for Grades9-10; 7:30 p.m., Senior HighFellowship.

Tuesday, 4 p.m.. PrimaryChoir rehearsal for Grades1, 3, 3.

Wednesday, 5:30 p.m., con-firmation class; 8 pjn., SeniorChoir rehearsal.

REDEEMER LUTHERANCHURCH

2 » Cowperthmite Plac«WestfleM, N. J. 07MOThe Rev. Eugene A.

RehwinkeltSl-1517

FAJOLT WORSHIP HOURS8:30 and 11:00 a-m.

CHRISTIAN NURTUREHOUR

9:50 a-m.Thursday, 8 p.m., Luther

Choir.Sunday, 8:30 a.m., worship;

9:50 am., Sunday school,confirmation classes, youthBible class, adult Bible class;11 a.m., Communion cele-brated at this sen-Ice; 3 p.m.to 6 p.m., special peoplesChristmas Party.

Monday, 11:15 a-m., CherubChoirt ,

Tuesday, 8 p.m., WomensEvening Guild meeting; 8p.m., parish education meet-ing.

Wednesday, 9 a.m., DaySchool Chapel; 7 p.m., Ad-vent n .

-THE WESTFKLD (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1978 Page U

Lay Minister's FamilyTo Serve at Installation

Redeemer LutheranChurch will install Arthur R.Kreyling, a parishioner, asthe first lay minister in theparish at the 11 a.m. wor-ship service Sunday.

Participating in the serv-ice of installation of a layminister will be Dr. WalterL. Zeile, president of theNew Jersey District of theLutheran Church-MissouriSynod; the Rev. Eugene A.Rehwinkel, pastor; the Rev.Arthur L. Kreyling, 89,pastor emeritus. Fords,falher of the installee; theRev. Paul C. Kreyling,executive secretary ofmissions of the EasternDistrict, LCMS, Buffalo,N.Y., a brother; the Rev.Donald Muller, son-in-law*Canandaigua,N.Y.; RonaldStock, president of thecongregation; DanielKrueger, elders chairman;and Edward Moller, trusteechairman.

Born in Pittsburgh, Pa.,Jan. 10, 1916, the son of aLutheran minister, Mr.•Kreyling has served on thehoard of elders, board ofparish education, board oftrustees, board of steward-ship, Sunday school andBible class teacher, Sundayschool superintendent andvarious other committees inthe congregation in his 22year membership in theparish. Married to RosalindBueschel Kreyling in 1942,they have four children:Lynne Kreyling, Baltimore,Md., Mrs. Donald Muller.Canandaigua, N.Y.; Mrs.Wayne Valentino, Brook-field, III., and Arthur E..

Arthur It. Kreyling

who resides at their home inNorth Plainfield,

Kreyling retired fromAmerican Smelting andRefining Company in PerthAmboy as a metallurgist inMarch 1976, and made adecision to enter thecolloquy program for the layministry of the LutheranChurch-Missouri Synod inJune, 1977. During the past18 months, Kreyling hasbeen in a study and researchprogram, field workprogram and finally an oralexamination, to qualify to becertified as a lay minister inthe synod. Kreyling ispresently an elder in thecongregation, assisting thepastor in ministry in theareas of conducting wor-ship, visitations, teachingand administration. In

The Rev. Paul C.Kreyling

addition to congregationalduties and responsibilities,Kreyling has done surveywork in mission stations inthe New Jersey District,conducted worship invarious parishes in NewJersey and is currently amember of the budgetcommittee on missions forthe New Jersey District.

It is a "first" forRedeemer Lutheran Churchto have a lay minister andalso a "first" in the NewJersey District of theLutheran Church-MissouriSynod. Presently the synodhas 100 lay ministers in-volved in church work andthe future of lay ministry inthe church body is in-creasing annually, withpresently 750 pastoralvacancies in (he synod.

BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH539 Trinity Place

Westfleld, N. 3. 07090Dr. Miles i. Austin

Pamonage 233-0049Study 253-1578

Sunday, church school 9:30a.m., worship service 11 a.m.

Weekdays, Wednesday 8p.m., prayer and visitation ofsick shut-in.

Monthly meetings, first Sun-day, 4 p.m., missionary soci-ety; first Monday, 7 p.m.,board of deacons; second Mon- jday, 8 p.m., pastor's aid aux- •illary; fourth Monday, 8 p.m.,w o m e n ' s fellowship; firstTuesday, 8 p.m., board ofdeaconess; second Tuesday, 8p.m., board of ushers; second

i Tuesday, 8 p.m., nurses unit.

Hallelujah" Sunday At Holy TrinityThe Christmas portion

(Part One) plus the"Hallelujah" chorus fromHandel's masterpiece"Messiah" will be presentedwith full instrumental en-semble, soloists and com-

Sanctuary of Holy TrinitySunday, at 7:30 p.m.

Nancy Freed, musicdirector at Holy Trinity, willconduct the Adult Choir ofHoly Trinity combined withsome members of Metuchen

bined choirs in the - I area choirs. Chorister

Bassano AttacksTax "Gimmickry'

Assemblyman C. LouisBassano today attacked aproposal to change the

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Chamber EventAttracts

The Westfield AreaChamber of Commerceholiday dinner dance atEcho Lake Country Clubattracted councilmen, re-tailers, bankers, Chambermembers and friends of theaward recipients honored bythe Chamber for communityservice. Following cocktailsand dinner, Susan Fell,Chamber president, intro-duced former mayor DonnSnyder who presented thefirst commendation tooutgoing mayor AlexWilliams. Mayor Williamsreceived a framed citation inrecognition of his service toWestfield.

Walter J. Lee received hisproclamation from ArthurFried, former Chamberpresident and longtimefriend, who praised Lee forhis 50 years as publisher ofthe Westfield Leader.Leader editor Gail Trimblewas presented with anaward by Florence Saland,manager of th,e Westfieldbranch of National Bank ofNew Jersey. Mrs. Trimblewas recognized for herjournalistic excellence overthe past 25 years with theLeader.

Chamber vice presidentWarren Rorden saluted ChetFienberg, vice president of

Manythe Recycling Center for thesuccessful operation of thecenter located on South Ave.at the train station for thepast eight years.

Susan Fell presentedformer Chamber executivedirector Frank King with anaward for his contribution tothe establishment of theattendant parking lot be-tween Elm St. and MountainAve.

Each recipient of anaward also received a gaggift. After the presentations,guests danced to DaveElgart's music until mid-night.

Sun Petroleum

Promotes MeyerSun Petroleum Products

Company has announced theappointment of Peter C.Meyer of Westfield. for-merly manager, industrialmarketing to manager, lubemarketing. Meyer isresponsible for bothbranded and unbrandedlubes which have beenconsolidated into onedepartment. This includeswaxes and lube extracts forrubber chemical processingindustries.

JARVIS DRUG STORE54 Elm St.

Westfield

PrescriptionsDrugs

Cosmetics

Kodak Dealer

FREE DELIVERY

233-0662-3-4

tax as "outrageous fiscalgimmickry which will onlylead to greater budgetarydifficulties in 1979."

Bassano, now serving inhis third term, said theproposal is "a part of theGovernor's balance-lhe-budget-with-mirrors act willdivert attention away fromthe critical nature of thestate's fiscal situation."

"By the Democrats' ownadmission, the legislation isaimed at juggling the booksto reach a one-time savingsof some $1C million,"Bassano s^id. "At the sametime, the Democrats admitthat the move can becarried out just once - solelyto help the majority getthrough 1979. an electionyear, with a tax increase."

The Republican chargedthat the legislation was apart of the overall plan bythe Byrne Administration to"avoid cutting spendingwhere it should be cut.

"The ultimate aim of theAdministration and theLegislature should be arestoration of fiscal stabilityto New Jersey," Bassanosaid. "The kind of programthe Governor has offeredand which the Democrat-controlled Legislature isapparently going to acceptpushes us further awayfrom the kind of stabilityand ever closer to chaos.

"When the fiscalgimmicks nave all beenused, when changes in taxcollection dates anddistribution formulas haveall been made, when tuitionat state colleges has beenincreased to confiscatorylevels, and when autoregistrations cost more thanever before, the slate willfall into a budget gap ofimmense proportions," hesaid.

"And, at that point, thefiscal crisis which will befallthe state will verge on theunmanageable," he said.

Men's FellowshipTo Meet Saturday

The December meeting ofthe Full Gospel BusinessMen's Fellowship Inter-national, Elizabeth-UnionCounty Chapter, will beheld, at 9 a.m. Saturday inthe Howard Johnson's East-bound lane of Rt. 22,Springfield.

The speakerSpencei Parker.

will be

trebles of the Children'sChoir will be singing in achorus. Soloists includesoprano Susan Kobinson,oratorio singer recentlyreturned from a concerttour in New England, andFriedel Graef, a locallyprominent soprano of manyyears.

Contralto Jennifer Lar-more. tenor Mark Bleeke,and bass Greg Funfgeldhave all been members ofthe Westminster TouringChoir. Greg was musicdirector of CalvaryLutheran Church, Cranford,for many years, befonaccepting a position at theFfrsl Presbyterian Churchof Bethlehem, Pa. Mark, nostranger to local musiclovers, is a full-lime teacherin addition to being aprofessional member of theRiverside Church choir inNew York City. Paul MonteJr. will share tenor honorsand Jack Dazzo. also fromHoly Trinity, is an ad-ditional bass soloist.

Donations will be ac-cepted at the door. Seatingis somewhat limited so it issuggested that attendeesplan to arrive early.

To OrdainPriest

The Rev. Peter K. Turner,assistant at All Saints'Episcopal Church, ScotchPlains, will be ordained tothe Priesthood at 10:30 a.m.Saturday by the Rt. Rev.Albert W. Van Duzer,S.T.D., D.D.. Bishop of theEpiscopal Diocese of NewJersey. A reception forF a t h e r T u r n e r ,parishioners, relatives andfriends will be held in theparish hall following theservice.

Father Turner is agraduate of WilliamsCollege and New YorkUniversity and the MercerSchool of Theology on LongIsland. He is currentlyemployed by Schering &Plough in Kennilworth.

He and his wife. Patricia,and their two children,Helen and Nancy, reside inScotch Plains. FatherTurner will celebrate hisfirst Holy Eucharist al Ha.m. Sunday.

"Coffeepot" Seriesat Church Tuesday"Meet Us at the Cof-

feepot" Tuesday at GraceOrthodox PresbyterianChurch, 1100 Boulevard,from 10-11 a.m. will featurecoffee and conversation,and Mrs. George Kondak,who will speak about thefaith of the New Testamentwoman Elizabeth, as part ofthe series of la Iks on womenof the Bible.

Newcomers are welcome.Nursery is provided. Anyquestions may be directed tothe church.

Mrs. Kieanor Smith

Accepts AwardFor Church

WomenMrs. Eleanor Smith, a

member of the WestfieldPresbyterian Church andpast president of ChurchWomen United in NewJersey, will he accepting anaward for that group whenstate organizations arehonored for their part-nership in Ihe reviializationof New Jersey cities at adinner tomorrow at Mid-dlesex County College inEdison. The awards dinneris sponsored by the NewJersey Council of Churches.

An innovative programfor enabling responsibleaction on urban issues willbe recognized in the awardto Church Women United, amovement of Protestant,Orthodox and RomanCatholic women. "UrbanCauseway '78" was anationwide effort toexamine first-hand the mosturgent needs of 16 Americancities, including Newark.

Teams of women spentthree travel-filled weeksstudying welfare, housing,employment, transporta-tion, education, and healthneeds, interviewing bothproviders and recipients ofservices in these areas.Their findings are beingused to motivate an activenetwork of church womencommitted to responsibleaction to meet urban needs.Mrs. Smith participated inIhe Eastern team of "UrbanCauseway 78."

Chanukah PartyAt Temple Dec. 17

The Westfield-Mountain-side B'nai B'rith Lodge 2415and the Temple Emanu-ElMen's Club will once againsponsor their annualChanukah Party a I TempleKmanu-Kl, 756 East BroadSt.. from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.Sunday, Dec. 17. Admissionis a donation of one can ordry parcel of food from eachchild. The food will later bedistributed to the localneedy families. .

The party is open to allchildren regardless ofreligious affiliations. Therewill be games and prizes forall 'ages, one year old andup. Each child will be en-titled to a free hot dog lunch.A small donation is requiredfrom adults wanting lunch.

Questions may be directedto Mrs. Ricki Zunk of 526Mountain Ave.

"Is Godreally

listeningwhen

I pray?"No one could care morethan God does, whathappens to you.When you understandeven a little ot Hisgoodness and care, andturn to Him trustingly—you find what you needto solve any p/oblem.How God answersprayer Is shown in theBible, and is anImportant subject In ourSunday School. Anyonethrough age 19 iswelcome, any Sunday.

First Church ofChrist, Scientist

422 East Broad StreetWastfield, NswJeriey

Page 24: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Fmc* THE WESTFKXD (XJ.) LEADER, THl'BSDAY DECEMBEB 7, 1871

PAL Youth Center OpenThe Westfield PAL Youth Center opened as

scheduled as a place for Westfield students to goMonday. Wednesday and Thursday evenings from 7-10p.m. As of now. (our rooms are being used: Recreationroom, lounge, reference room and gym. Membershipof Si entitltni participants to al! PAL activities.

The Youth Center is Located at the former HolyTrinity Grammar School. The PAL is still looking forrecreation equipment and people to give a night amonth to help make the center a success. Anyone withfree time, recreation equipment or questions maycontact Barbara Kcech. 411 Elm St.

PT Council MeetingRescheduled

The second generalmeeting of Parent-TeacherCouncil has been changedfrom Dec. 14 to Mar. 22 at9:15 at Grant School. Thenext scheduled generalmeeting will be held at 9:15 ja.m. Jan. 25 at TamaquesSchool.

LEGAL NOTICI

Lenape Park Reservation

Dam Wins ApprovalTwo federal agencies

have approved plans uconstruct an earthern damin the Lenape ParkReservation adjacent toWestfield that is designed toprotect Kenilworth.Cranford. and other com-munities along the RahwayRiver from severe flooding.it was announced today byRep. Matthew J Rinaldo

He said the I S Fish andWildlife Service has with-drawn its earlier demandsthat the length of the projectbe doubled to allow for moremeandering sections thatcould be stocked uith fish '

Rinaldo had advised theFish and Wildlife Servicethat lengthening the projectwould have tripled its costs •and delayed it for severalyears. As a result, hewarned. thousands ofresidents' between Rahwaynnd Springfield would havesuffered severe flooddamage.

"The construction of thisdam will mean that theheart of L'nion County willbe protected from anotherDoria flood, which was thesecond worst flood onrecord in the Hahway.basin." Rinaldo said "Theonly other flood that was -:worse was the flash flood of:

August. 1973. The Lenape ,project would provide •substantial protectionagainst that kind of deluge ;when seven inches of rain :fell in a few hours." :

Rinaldo said the Lenapedam also will improve idownstream water quality ;by controlling soil erosion ]and sedimentation. In ad-;dition, the Union CountyParks and Recreation'.Department is expected to'develop the marsh land:around Lenape Park for irecreation. .Much of it is now !inaccessible to the public. !

The 32S-acre storm water 'detention basin . in iKenilworth will be created iby constructing an earthen idike along the lower por-;

tions of the Lenape Park. It 'will include flood gates that :allow the dam to be drained .in advance of a major stormwarning or flash flood

Rinaldo praised theproject as "one of the mostinnovative and sensible

approaches to flood controltaken in the state of New-Jersey It proves thatcounty and local govern-ments can conceive andexecute flood preventionprograms without goingthrough the laborious jprocess of a Congressionalappropriation." :

The Lenape Park dam will :receive almost all of itsfunding from the county andthe local communitiesbenefiting from the project. 'The initial study for the!project was covered by a$2iX).0O0 federal grant.

The Union CountyCongressman explained :that the Lenape Park damwould fit into a master planfor flood control coveringmost of Union County.Congress recently passed an •authorization of $25.6 •million to continue floodcontrol work on theElizabeth and RahwayRivers.

Ground-breaking for thenext-to-the-last phase of theElizabeth River floodcontrol project, whose costwill reach£41.6 million whenit is finished in 19S3. will be :held near Mattano Park on \Monday. :

Rinaldo said that theHeritage Conservation andRe.creation Service alsogave the green light for theLenape construct ionproject. :

The Union County 'Congressman expressed 'optimism that the con- •struction design would meet !with the Army Corps'sstandards for safety, andthat the construction work jcould be started this fall, i

The Union County Board ;of Freeholders has iauthorized SI .3 million in icounty funds. The rest will !be shared by Cranford. jKenilworth, Rahway. 'Union. Springfield, arid •Westfield. All except iWestfield have agreed to the •funding formula. ;

The project was initiated ;by Kenneth B. Marsh, j .hydraulic engineer for the •county planning board. .following the devastation of 'Hurricane Doria. It causedmillions of dollars in losses .and cut a flood path through jthe middle of the county.

PUBLIC NOTICEPutti'C Notice is hereoy given that

a repcy-t nas D*en I.led rjy the Tcm-no* wesrtieid wirn tr,e Director o* theBureau ot *r.e Census, united StatesDepartment of Commerce, of th<seoeral reveni>e sfiar.n; programtor trie fiscal vear ending DecemDer31. 1977. Tre report. With supportingoocurr.entation. is avaita&le forPUCMIC Noswcton in tte crffice of theTown Treasurer. MunicipalBuilding 415 East Broao Street.AesHie'rc. Ne* Jerser bennee" thehours of 9 00 a m . ana 5:00 p.m or-Vooda* through Frioay.

*>scai assistance funcs during thefiscal > ear enaing December 31. 1977ivere as follows.

Police Salaries £ Aajes 135*17JAV-ESR DICKSON

12 7 7g IT Fe*S $3 68

SHERIFF'S SALESUPERIOR COURT OF

NEWJERSEYCHANCERY DIVISION

UNION COUNTYDOCKET NO. F.KM.77

FAMILY SAVINGS AMD LOANASSOCIATION PLAINTIFF, ssROLANDO OCAV.PO. his heirs, ae* 'Sees ana personal representatives.a**.a h'S tfteir or an» of their sue ,cwsorS ;rt r.cht. title anct interest 'dio SONIA OCAVPO. his wife, her :heirs, devisees, ana personalrepresentatives, ana her. their, oran» of tneir successors in right, tineano-n'erest, etais DEFENDANTSCiVIL ACTION WRIT OF EXECUTION FOR SALE OF M0RT-GAGED PREMISES

vr virtue of me aoove-stateo wr>t :of execution to me directed I shall ,eipos* <w sale o* pooiic vendue. in itr>e Freeholder's Conference Room, iCourt House Annex, m the City o*Eluaoetn. U J., on V.EONESDAY. }tne ?5tn cay of December A D . 1971 :at r*-o o'clock in the afternccn of •sa o aay. =

BEGINNING at a point in me .Northeasterly line of .Masnolia :

Avenue, distant Northwesterly 125 •feet from the intersection of the satd Ilir.e of Magnolia Avenue, with the :Noir-.A-esterly line o* SecorKl Street,thence. i

i l l Along the said line of Magnolia IAvenue, North 35 degrees, *G *minutes West. 25 feet to a point, :thence !

,'2) North SJ degrees. 20 minutM 'East, 100 feet to a point, thence ,

i3) south as degrees. JQ minutes iEast, J5 feet to a point, therrce

u> South u degrees. 30 minutM iWest. ICO 'Mt to a point in the North- ;easterly line of Magnolia Avenue, 'which is the point and place o* -oeg.nning.

The above description is drawn in :

accordance with a survey made by IRoger M. Carroll and Company, idated 4 18 72. ,

BEING THE SAME premises iconveyed to the mortgagors by rfeed '.of Ricaroo Torres and Nivia Torres, ihis w.fe. dated May 2. 1972. ana irecorded simultaneously herewith.

This mortgage is to include tworanges. •

This is a first purchase money :mortgage given to secure a part of Ithe purchase price paid for the \premises above described. j

COMMONLY KNOWN AS 211Magnolia Avenue. Elizabeth. N.J.and designated for tax purposes as 'Account No. 1-297 j

There is due approximately S27.- IC70 82 with interest from July 16. ,1297s and costs.

The sheriff reserves the right toacisurn tnis sale. '

RALPHFROEHLICH •Sheriff !

NfCOLAIDES and LYBECK,-:trs i

DJ 4 AL CX17I 'II 12 H -<T SH3.12 ;

Mrs. Green on Cultural BoardMrs. Elizabeth Pate.;

chairman of the Union'County Cultural and Heri-tage Programs Advisory.Board, has announced the;appointment by the UnionCounty Board of Chosen:

Freeholders, of Mrs. Hor-tense K. Green of West-field to the cultural-;heritage group.

The thrust of Mrs.Green's life has centered;around cultural activities:.1at the age of seven, shewas a scholarship -studentin the Elsa Heilich Schoolof Dance: at 14. a memberof the Sarah M. Strauss!Company. New York. For'three vears. Mrs. Green

was a member of the NewYork Metropolitan Opera |Company ballet, perform- <ing as a soloist.

Now retired from the '•theater and the business iworld, she has continued to ,retain her interest in thearts, devoting much of hertime in promoting publicawareness and apprecia-tion of crafts in NewJersey. Mrs. Green is cur-rently a member of theBoard of the MonristownCraft Market, vice-presi-dent of the New Jersey '<Designer Craftsmen, and jwas chairman of the New-Jersey Designer Crafts- jmen Capitol Exhibition.

Marie Donatelli (le]l) of Edison and Jeanne Bruno ofElizabeth, co-chairpersons of the service committee ofthe Kidney Fund of New Jersey with headquarters inWestfield. make plans for several upcoming projectswhich the Kidney Fund is sponsoring during 197$.

INYITATIONTO BIDS«aie<3 proposals fw tr.e construe-

ron of storm drainaae facilities atHarrow Road mil « received by live ,Town of w«tfieia in the Council *Cr.a.-n&ers at tr» Municipal &v\\o-• f,g. i2S East Broad Street, West- '•f-eic, N r * Jersey oo Decem&er 16. '1573 at 10.-C0 a.m. orevailing lime. I

The worn i/naer this proposal 'ip-ciuces tne *urnithir>g of all labor. •naten'sl and equipment i>eceswry ;io complete ir*e work as shown on •tne contract crawinss arv5 oescri&eO Iin tne contract soecificatrons. All jprooouis snail be in accordance •*i?n rr-e cra*ings and specifications 'a*c tne terms of !t\e proposed ;contract. The work consists |primarily of approximately 739 |Lineal feet c< \2" R.C. pipe storm j&e*er witn attendant inlets arm al) jc*ner *ork necessary there*©*" and jirvciaentat trve^eto. '

Proposals must b* oeiivered at the i&<«ce »rvc frefwe rtw hour above '

cci&anieo by a certified cfieck or ;

t'Z oona para&ie to tr>e Tc*n of ;Wesrfieia »n an amount eqvel to at jieasi ten percent (151 of tne oase ]&.mooM oi tr* bid. but r>oi less than |SiM.W nor more man iJO-OMOO and imust M accorr.panied t>r a suretycompenr certificate stating that |«<a surerr company will provide |rr* oiode*- witrt tne required per-fyniA'vce Dood in tr>e full amoont oftr.e ccntract. by a noncolltrsionaffidavit, a contractor's quaiffica-t*on siarterr-ent and a statenvent ofownership oo tr e fems included inand eieiaine3 in the contractt»curr.*fltv

SiSOe^S must DC in compli»nc«with all pro-vis'ronj oi Oiapier 127P-l_ 1T75 supplement to me lawfrja^nsi discrimination (affirmativeact on) and must par workmen theprevailing wa©e rate* prommestetf !Of me New Jerser State Depart-ment of L-atjor a«c industry for misprotect, copiesc* whiai are on file inme office of rr»e To*rn Erttirveer.

Tr.is contract will ir>cluoe a f*xaar»oi»nt o* J500.00 as a contin^e?Ky.All *>ieders are r«uifed to add ttw*fixeo smcynt )o Tf-eir bkJ a ^ toinciuoe thij a*artional amount intneir bid bond as provided in tneinstructions to siooers this con-tii>9ertcy s«aii be incivded «" thecontract, t r * oet-hx-mance bond aoome tabpsr aivs material bond, butWfrr.ent Shall be maoe to thecontractor from mese ivr*c% oni fvpon me comptetion of e*tra worii5f the contractor, pursuant to awrirten. cnaftse orfrer.- or cnanffeoroers. sijned ttf me .contraafft^*&ent of t f * To-*n o* V*estfteia andtr«e contractor, prior to tne com-men-cen->*nt of socft *orlt, and swen&3fmenT Sjhali be in me amount*3re*d to a r the parties in *ritirvg \ntne cf.a-r>9e v<itr. or cftano* oroervThe ?o?si amoint of syen cnanoeorfiers in a contract snail neverei tetd trw total amount of thecont;r»yenc^ provided.

Th* s-jccessfui bidder snail startconstrKtionten calendar da/5 afternotice erf e*4TG is given and %f\»ucorrpleieallwortc within X workingcars aHer the start of work..

flans and soecifi cat ions may beseen or procured at tne office pf theTown Enc'Tteer, James Josepns,Public Works Center, 95? NorthAveooe w, , Westfield New Jersey.Tne Maerx and Covrvcil reserve merifiht to reject * n / and all bids and towaive any informality in any bid. it.in tr»e interest of the Town, it isdeemed advisable to do so

JAMES JOSEPHSTOWN ENGINEER

12778 IT S3 5. DO

JBUGVPH

ROOME

PCTASL

ELRV,CE A H A N D Y REFERENCE LIST O F RELIABLE L O C A L F IRMS

ALWAYS CALL YOURLOCAL DEALER ONLY

ALUMINUM PRODUCTS

WEATHER TEK ALUMINUMCORP.

AUTO DEALERS

•FACTORY O U T L E T -

STORM WINDOWS & DOORS

• ENCLOSURES.AWNINGS. SIDING

:B COLOBS X STYLES

• FULLY INSURED• tERM5 AVAILA9LE

• STATE REGS*CF - AT HOUl SERVICE

E$r!L%es 752-0313P.O BOX m. WESTFIELD

ANTIQUESTHE WHLTPLETREE

ANTIQUESFine Used Furniture

Bought & Soldcprnr* Mon. thru Sat.

&Tnun . Eve233-6644

522 Ontral Avt., Wnrfiald{Cor. Pirk Ava.l

APPLIANCES

, WflTFIELO* ONLY «( D IA IM

1kt GE • RCA • ZENITH •ROPER • SYLVANIA • RADIOS* APPLIANCES 4 FURNITURE

We Service Everything We Sell233-2121

143 E. Broad St., VVntfitM

APPLUHCES

ELM RADIO&TV INC.

TELEVISIONRCA-Zenith-Msgnavo*

DISHWASHERSKitchen Aid-Whirlpool

REFRIGERATORSWhirlpool-Amaru

WASHERS-DRYERSWhirlpool

AIH CONDITIONERSWhirlpool -Amaru-Carrier

VACUUMSHoo.t' E-i-ei-j

233-040020 ELM S"1" WESTFIELD

ARMY I NAVY GOODS

STARS A STRIPES!

Work & Sport Ctotfm For'WorMn, M«n & Children

• JEANS • OVERALLS. SURPLUS* CAMPING

276 0990"

AUTO BODY REPAIRS

SEVELL S A U T O

B O D Y SHOP COBoOY and Paint Shop

AAA • ALA vM.CA. Road Aid-

24 Hour TowingFender Repair* — PaintingTruck Painting and Repairs

Foreign Car Serrice

Call 232-8887

320 Windsor Ave. Westfield

DOM'S TOYOTAAUTO SALES

t AJ«* 25 YMTS

AUTO PARTS

t CORONASport Sedan*U Hud Topi

Luge Selection ofUp-lo-DiteUSED CARS

DU1 766-S3OO166 VS. H»T. No. 23

Nonh PUin field(Between Soisemt it Grow)

"ESTASLISHED 1921"

GOODWINMOTOR CORP.

F»ctor> Autfion2ed De«ler

MERCEDES-BENZSALES & SERVICE• GENUINE PARTS

• SELECTED PBE-OWNEDCARS

• EUROPEAN DEL. ARRANGED

CALL 754-3700

130VV.6thSt.& Arlinjion Ave.PLAINFIELD

REILLYOLDSMOBILECO,

AuthorizedOldsmobile

Sales & Service

560 North Aw. E. AD2-7651 ;Westlield, NewJerMy ]

ROTCHFORD i433 North Avenus, Esit

WESTFIELD, N.J.

232-41141138 South A M . W., WwfMd

GARWOODAUTO PARTS

«n. Toyota ft 0*tMin

OpX, Triumph, Vd»O

MACHINE SMOf SEfl VICE

789-1212-3570 SOUTH AVE., GARWOOD

Oflv fl lo 5 30 S4f. 8 (o 3 Son 9 to 1

AUTO REPAIRS

DELICATESSENS

TREATI

DELICATESSENDelicious Eatm'

Home Made Baked GoodsHors d'oejvres

CoidCuti Sa'jdiOpen Sundayi 8 a m 3 p m.

232-0925113 Quifnby St.. Weitf>e<d

DRAPERIES 1CUWTAIWS

triune I

JCITOOj

FOREIGN CARSPECIALISTS

Serung '.Vejttield For Over 25 Yn

Complete Repairs • TowingOpen 7 Days

Call 232-9648

Cor. South A n . & Central Ave.

CUSTOM DRAPERIESFABRIC OR PLASTIC

SLIPCOVERSTrdnwvdousSalKtlon

AVAILABLEH 2 - M & * or 8M-706*

Ut> WESTFIELD AVE., CLARK

DRUG STORES

TIFFANY DRUGSOpen 7 D i m Week

Daily B:30 ajn, to 10 p.m.Saturday 8:30 un . to 9 pjn.

Sundayi 9 «jn. to 2 pjn.

Hudson Vitamin ProductsRuuell Stover Candies

AMPLE FREE PARKINGFREE PICK UP & DELIVERY

INSULATION CONTRACTORS

NEW HOMES. OLDER HOMES.COMMERCIAL STRUCTURES

ENERGY SAVERSIO.i of HUD Cl* •u.«'«« FIO«IK« " * l

;oo KOKTH AVE. t . wtsT^ieuOAn Aut^>O*<tad Appl f i iOf

10 TE*W ( V * « « * ' n ' T trOR F««C ESTIMATE CALL 232-3474

INSURANCE

PEARS/U.L&FRANKENBACH

INC.

Est. 1922

232-4700115 Elm St. Wotfidd

LAUNDRIES

T3o

GEORGE'SBIKE

SHOP

SaletLEASING

233-2200115 South Ave.. W. Wat field

SET

PRINTERS

•LETTERHEADS• BUSINESS CARDS• RESUMES• IBM TYPING• FLYERS, BOOKLETS, eta

232-2287261 South Av«. E. Waitflald

ROOFING

WESTFIELD ftOOFINGAND SIDING CO.

Deal DirectNo Sub-Contracting

Roofing, Leaders, GuttersAluminum Siding & Repairing

Fully InsuradSatisfaction Guaranteed

For FREE ESTIMATESCall J.Gabriel

233-6160

SERVICE STATIONS

EUCLID SERVICE

BICYCLES

232-3700

ServicePARTS 654-3222

n• FUJI • MARU1SHI• CENTURION • KABUKI

SAAB

>

n

757-0030

232-5958741 CENTRAL AVE.

WESTFIELD

fUELOIL

Th« Front Vi'heel Drive Cir 1.Westfield Traded Used Cut r%

BOWLINGFUGMANN

OIL COMPANYAlwayt Ready to Servt You

WESTFIELD

BODY WORKS INC.

R J. PonpUioo, Prop.

COLLISION' SPECIALISTSEXPERT AUTO BODYfc FENDER REPAIRS

Diil Z32-707I

1130 South Aw. VV. Vrejrfifld

AUTO DEALERS

B R I S T O LMotors Inc

SALES SERVICE PARTS

AUSTIN-MGJAGUAR - ROVER

LAND ROVERDATSUN

CongenialSalesmen

Superb Service ip232-6500

LINCOLN MERCURY369 SOUTH AVE. E.

WESTFIELO

U>iUuw,4.Cku&.

VOLVO-RENAULTALTTHORIZED

SALES (SERVICE (PARTS• CLEAN USED CARS

• IMMEDIATE DELIVERY• HIGH TRADE-INS

756-2239505 SOMERSET ST.NO. PLAINFIELD

12 BLOCKS FROM RT. 22)

UNION COUNTYVOLKSWAGEN,

Inc.Authorized

VOLKSWAGEN CENTER

Salcj - Senric* - PutsS't» ind Used Cais

Factory Tiiined Mechanics756-7400

Sou-J, Ave.,PliinfieU

One o' the most modern botvlir^ . jcenters in N.J. Fjjlurmg 50 NewBrunnvick AZ Pinxllers, :

COCKTAIL LOUNGE \SNACK BAR iAIR CONDITIONED !AMPLE PARKING 38117CO j140 CENTRAL AVE..CLARK i

CARPET & RUG CLEANING

755^400 t75S6408l5-15 VS. Hwy. No.lJ

North PtihvTKkl

WESTFIELDDODGE, Inc.

STEAM CARPETCLEANING CO.

For A Full Professioiwi]

CLEANING SERVICE

CALL 233-2130

405 CUMBERLAND AVE..

WESTFIELO

CONTRACTORS

Sales L Service 'Watchdog Burner Service •

Euy Budget Payment Plan jDial 232-5272 |

361 South A n . , E. W»tfi«ld !

RANKIN FUELCO.

Since 1898 !"Noihinr Counta Like Sex*1ce"

OIL BURNERSilet L ServiceDial 276-9200

230 Centennial Ave., Cranford

REEL-STRONGFUELCO.EST.1925

• HEATINGS COOLING• FUELOIL-BURNERS• HUMIDIFIERS• AIR CONDITIONERS

DIAL 276-0900549 LEXINGTON AVE.

CRANFORD

LAUNDRY SERVICE INC.J t V f , . EST. 1927

f 'muti i V LAUNOERERS* i z \ DRV CLEANERS

t CAREER APPARELRENTAL* SALES

BONDED PICK UP & DELIVERY

756-2640902 NORTH AVE..PLAINFIELD

LUMBERJ.S.IRVINGCOMPANY

LUMBER i MILLWURKOf Every Description

FUEL OIL BURNERSHARDWARE PAINTS

233-1492608 SOUTH AVE W., WEST.

PAINTS

E.ACHTEMANINC

Painting and Decorating

Serving Westfield

Since 1924

Home 369-4148

Shop 753-2668

DAN'SPAINTING

•nd DECORATING

DELICATESSENS

AUTHORIZEDSalei tsd Scnrlce

ALL DODGE PRODUCTSFULL CHRYSLER SERVICE

Dial 232-0075

425 North Ave. E. Wertfield

MOUNTAINSIDEDELICATESSEN

233 3092

GIFT SHOPS

f ickuiick tillage

. UNUSUAL ctrrs .ronjiv

. c u c r w u i n •CANOT

232-1092

HEARING AIDS

HEARING AIDCENTERof WestfieldAuthorized

AN AD ON THIS PAGE

MAY EARN YOU

MORE DOLLARS

Jacquelyn ThatcherCertified Hearing Aid

ConsultantDial 233-0939

2O3ElmSi.,W«tfieJdLie. No. 257

ADVERTISEIN

THISSPACE

INTERIOR, EXTERIOH

QUAUJY WORKFREE ESTIMATES

INSURED

889-6200SCOTCH PLAINS, N J .

n 5 OJ

to8 s 5 2.

I f K. «r o. 2

S. 5 9:^ rt —

PLUMBING

MOUNTAINSIDEPLUMBING &

HEATING

RESIDENTIALCOMMERCIALINDUSTRIAL

233-0397374 Short Dr.

Mountainside, N J .

COMPLETE ELECTRONIC• MOTOR TUNE-UPSCOMPLETE BRAKE

SERVICEBATTERIESALTERNATORSSTARTER MOTORSEXHAUST SYSTEMS

COMPLETE RE INSPECTIONCENTER

TIRESSHOCKS

FRONT END REPAIRSAIR CONDITIONING

REPAIRSTOWING

ROAD SERVICESNOW PLOWING

CALL 2324744 OR 232-9780459 NORTH AVE. E.WESTFIELD, NJ.

STOCK BROKERS

BUTCHER&.SINGEIUMIMltl Mf* YOU ST0OC UOUMGE. UK.

»HO OIHfl PIIHCirU EXCHANGES- • mas .Km • wrui nm• t»tas i twou MW • umii wnn

654-6380

UPHOLSTERERSINTCflOHS BY

CUSTOM UPHOLSTERYFREE SHOP AT HOME SERVICE

SLIPCOVERS - DnpvlMCUSTOM MADE

CALL 382-8884 or 828-706624& Weitatld Ave. CLARK

VOURBUSINESS

CAN GROWWITH AN

AD ONTHIS PAGE

Page 25: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Eighth graders Dan O'Connor and Bill Carl preparetickets for Roosevelt Junior High School dance.

Roosevelt Dance TomorrowThe Roosevelt Junior

High School Student Councilis preparing for a WinterWonderland Dance to beheld tomorrow evening. Thestudents have attendedseveral meetings during thepast few weeks to work onposters, tickets, prizes,and to plan refreshments,decorations and music. Thedance will feature a disc

jockey, Jim Hill, who willplay popular music that thestudents have requested.

The Student Council plansto use the money raisedfrom this dance to helpneedy children in thecountry. The council also iscollecting money this weekin school for UNICEF tohelp children around theworld. Student Counciladvisor is Randee Lantis.

Paul Kueter GroupTo Perform Concert

Paul Kueter, pianist, andthe Lafayette ChamberPlayers will play a concertfor the Friends of thePlainfield Library at 3 p.m.Sunday. The program willconsist of works by Vivaldi,Telemann, Ibert, Martin,Chabrier and Schubert.

Kueter, who maintainsteaching studios in West-field, New York and NewBrunswick, has performedin New Jersey as solopianist with the Plainfield,Suburban, SomersetCounty, Rutgers, FairleighDickinson and WestfieldBicentennial SymphonyOrchestras. Last month inWestfield he accompaniedMetropolitan Opera tenorJohn Carpenter in thesecond Community Concertof the season. In New Yorkhe has performed as en-semble artist and ac-companist for concerts inCarnegie Hall, Town Halland Carnegie Recital Hall.For ten years he was amember of the musicfaculty of Douglass College,Rutgers University.

Joan Cushman, also aWestfield resident, will beguest soprano at the con-cert. She studied voice withThelma Votipka, notedMetropoli tan Operasoprano, and with ArthurKraft at the Eastman Schoolof Music. She has coachedwith Emmanuel Balaban.Frederic Popper and TiborKozma. In New York City

, Paul Kueter

she has been soloist inconcerts at the 92nd Street"Y" , Fordham University,Academy of the SacredHeart, ManhattanvilleCollege and in Brooklyn atthe Brooklyn Academy ofMusic. She has also sungnumerous opera roles inNew York and New Jerseyin opera groups under thedirection of FredericPopper.

Other members of thee n s e m b l e i n c l u d eEmmanuel Mesthene, flute,Daniel Schuman, violin,George Jones, clarinet andRoe Goodman, bassoon. Theconcert, which is free, willbeheld in the Meeting Roomof the Library, located onPark Ave. and Eighth St. inPlainfield.

Some people have thought that wearing anarrow around their necks will keep away evil spirits.

Among poster contest winners for Redeemer LutheranSchool's Dec. 17 Christmas musical are Stuart Kilpinen,4th grade, and lleide Katerba, 5th grade. They areholding posters created by Ashley Lofton and BillyVesey, winners in second grade. The program, "LoveCame Down" will be presented at 7 p.m. in the church atClark St. and Cowperthwaite Pla., The public is invited.

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-THE WESTFIELD (KJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER T, 1»78 Page »

County Vocational Center

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Adds Facility for HandicappedGround-breaking cere-

monies for an 80,000 squarefoot addition to the UnionCounty Vocational Centertook place on last week. Thenew facility, specificallydesigned to providevocational training forapproximately 800 handi-capped students in 11 new orexpanded occupationalareas, is scheduled to openin September 1980.

This will be the firstfacility of its kind in NewJersey to integrate handicapped students and thosewith special needs into allr e g u l a r v o c a t i o n a lprograms. The curriculumwill be flexible to allowstudents to progress according to their individualrequirements.

Planned in conjunctionwith industrial advisorycommittees and representatives from the "specialneeds" community, the newaddition to the Union CountyVocational Center will betotally barrier-free.

Speaking at the ground-breaking ceremony .Freeholder Thomas Longpraised the members of the

Union County Vocational-Technical Board ofEducation and adminis-trative and professionalstaffs for acting as acatalyst for the creation ofsuch a facility. "If you hadnot provided the expertise.

we would not be heretoday," he said. "This eventis not only an importantlandmark in vocationaleducation, but also in thelives of all families in UnionCounty with handicappedyoungsters," he added.

Breaking ground with great gusto for the new CountyVocational facility for the Handicapped, is CountyManager George Albanese, (left) and FreeholderThomas W. Long.

AFS to Have Boutique BoothBecause of their in-

ternational involvementwith foreign exchangestudents, American FieldService (AFS) has beeninvited to run a booth at theWestfield Junior Women'sClub International Boutiquescheduled from 10 a.m. to 4p.m. Saturday at RooseveltJunior High School.

AFS Club members willmake and sell Christmasornaments and food, as wellas their international note-cards and buttons. In ad-dition, club members willsell the cards and buttonsthroughout the year. Theycan be purchased in room104 after school hours,

Money earned from thesale of cardsand buttons willgo into the AFS treasury,

but funds raised from theChristmas ornaments andfood will be used to defrayexpenses of a trip AFS hasplanned to New York CityDec. 16. Highlights of thetrip include a vi6it to theUnited Nations and awalking tour featuring thefamous holiday displays inthe leading departmentstores along Fifth Ave.

In old Bohemia, people usedto sprinkle fern seed ontheir savings to keep it fromdiminishing.

Ceramic LessonsDaytime & EveningInstruction by Certified teacher

Lilo StudioLilo Schmiede322-9109

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Traditionally, local Santas followadvertisements in The Leader tohelp them make their gift selections.

You could miss out in this particularlybusy shopping season if you don'tlet these Santas know what youhave to offer.

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THE WESTFIELD LEADERSince 1890-A Newspaper

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THJE WXSTFULD (XJ.J LEADEB, THI BAD AT, OECEMBJEB 7, I»T»

Cliff Diving:"A Lot of Risky Judgments'

A high diver's ultimatedream - soaring out andaway from the cliffs ofAcapulco - ha* come !ruefor Tim Coumbe of West-field, a 20->ear-")d pro-fessional diver and full-limestudent at Union College

Selected as a member o(the United States' six-manhigh-divina team. Tim willgo to Acapulco for the world-known cliff-diving event* onDec. 16

'"This really represents •Ihe fulfillment of a lifelonggoal, because the Acapulcocompetition is consideredthe Olympics of highdiving." he said "I reallydidn't expect to be chosenThere were only fouropenings on the team and tdidn't think I'd make it '"

But make it he did. and hisfriends, family, neighborsand classmates will have achance to watch ihe:r

"native son" on televisionwhen the taped perform-ance is run on Wide World o:Sports in Januars orFebruary

Tim's divine began -Ahenhe was nine \ ears old At the.ige of IS. he turned profes-sion 1 and took a job divrr.im Great Adventure Amuse-ment Park in Jackson He is'he third >oungest pro-fessional high diver in theworld

After 3 year of diving U"feel into a 16-foot-oieep poolof water. Tun decided hereally wanted and needed acollege education, "for thatlime when 1 can't diveanymore " He enrolled full-time ai I'nion College this •semester as a liberal artsstudent, and continued hisGreat Adventure perform-ances through October

The trip to Acapulco ••'•illnaturally mean missingsome school work In fact.

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Tim will miss all his finalexams but he's madearrangements with hisprofessors to take the examswhen he returns. "Hiving isstsil my first love but thiscollege education is veryimportant to me I'mdetermined to £et it." hesaid

At the Acapulco events.Tim will d;ve 8* feet intowater that varies in depthfrom four to 12 feet,depending ^n whether a«ave has just come inFrom his pre-dive. cliff-top

: position, he won't be able tosee the water, which isconcealed by 3 bank of rockshe low.

"I'll have to measure thesize and speed of the waveas it approaches, then timetr.v leap to what I predict asthe wave's arrival time."Tim said "It involves a lotof risky judgments."

Teachers SimulateLife of Handicapped

coffee and cut cake Otherswere given wheelchairs and |attempted to use schoollockers, water plants andoperate the elevator." sheadded.

University Shop Open Evenings 'til Christmas

THE LEADER STORE109 E. BROAD STREET WESTFIELD

Ever wondered what itwould be like to be blind - ordeaf What kind ofproblems would one en-counter if bound to a wheel-chair" More than 450 teach-ers and administrators of ,the I'nion County Regional j "Role-playing" the part ofschool system got a taste of | hearing impaired students,what it might be like at an 1 the teachers listened tounusual in-service program ! distorted tape recordedheld at David Brearley j messages that simulated thoRegional in Kenilworth. ; problems of the hard of

i hearing. Others were givenThis project, part of a '

S15O.00O federal grant,was initiated byBill Friedel of the New I ' The post-meeting reactionJersey Department of .; by the teachers was bothEducation. Union County i immediate and outspokenRegional, composed of the I One teacher, commentingfour high schools in Clark. ! on his role as a blind person.Springfield. Berkeley j said "I hated it: 1 wouldHeights and Kenilworth.was on* of 50 districts inNew Jersey granted Si.000to develop special trainingof regular classroom teach-ers who deal with han-dicapped students. UnionCounty Regional has almostMO handicapped students,from throughout the county,enrolled in its classes.

Eclipse ChasersPlan Feb. Trip

I assignments that dealt with| the problems of the[ perceptually impaired

need a great deal of pa-tience. I can't stand waiting.not seeing who is talking ornot knowing where I'mgoing or where I'\e been.My God. I now treasure theeift of my sight. '

Durine the 1977-8 school>ear. a group of teachersfrom various subject areashad 10 meetings in whichthey developed the formatfor the recent in-serviceprogram

Mrs Anita Williams, thein-service coordinator of theproject, explained. "Thepurpose of this meeting wasto help teachers understandthe needs of specialstudents. We wanted to putteachers into the shoes oftheir handicapped students •• !et them see ior feel' theworld from a differentviewpoint."

The in-service, carried outduring an early releaseperiod, marked the end ofweeks of preparation. Uponarrival, the teachers weregiven aB orientation lectureby Mrs. Betty l.ipper ofWestfield. president of theAssociation for Childrenwith Learning DisabilitiesAfterwards they weredivided into smaller groupsled by members of Ihespecial education depart-ment and the original in-service committee

"The small group sessionsenabled the teachers to role-play' ihe parts of varioustypes of handicappedstudents." said Mrs.Williams. "Teachers wereblindfolded and asked tofollow directions. Forexample, they had to pour

• This same teacher spokeof her role as a teacher «ithhandicapped youngsters inher class. She said. "Icouldn't understand w hy mysludent 'handicapped1 wasso slow. I was frustrated !guess maybe I should taketime to smell the roses andrealize that everyone isn'tas lucky as I am."

Another teacher's re-action was "... one ofureat feeling for the har.di- •capped. To simulate thehandicapped and expresshow it felt was rewardingSharing these feelings withothers and exchanging ideasmade the session mosteducational."

Concerns of the teachersover adequate preparation(or dealing with han-dicapped students in theirclassrooms were also ex-pressed "How can aprofessional, trained in aspecific subject area, beexpected to be knowledE-able in the correct handlineof many types of handi-capped youngsters'1 We willdo these students a terribleinjustice if they are put inour classes without ade-quate training (or us.the teachers. This isfrightening." said oneveteran history teacher.Another instructor echoedthis feelina when she said."While the demonstrationscertainly sensitized, theyd e m o n s t r a t e d t h etremendous nee: •••• prepareteachers before students'handicapped are inclass."

A group of "eclipsechasers." members of ana s t r o n o m e r s ' g roupheadquartered at UnionCollege. are makingpreparations for their up-coming expedition toCanada where they willobserve and photograph thesolar eclipse to occur onFeb 26

The event will be the lastsolar eclipse the UnitedStates and Canada willexperience until the year2017 or 2024, according to thepresident of AmateurAstronomers, GeorgeChaplenko.

Chaplenko said themembers already feel theexcitement of viewing whatmay be the last eclipse intheir lifetimes. AAI is theorganization that operatesthe Sperry Observatoryjointly with Union College.

The February trip hasbeen arranged by thegroup's eclipse committee.Composed of veterans ofother AAI eclipse ex-peditions (one to Africa in1973. another to Colombia in

timum viewing conditions,Chaplenko explained.

The path of this eclipse, anunusually wide one. willcover the southern half ofWashington and the north-em third of Oregon.However, prospects forviewing along the west coastare poor because of thetypical heavy overcast andconsiderable precipitationduring the morning hours atthat time of year.

Most of the "eclipsechasers" will fly to Win-nipeg on Saturday, Feb. 24,arriving mid-afternoon.They will be met at theairport by a winterized buswhich will transport them tothe hotel, the eclipse siteand back to the airport.

The bus also will be keptat hand during the viewingpreparations for "warmthbreaks." Although humidityis usually very low there,provision must be made forsub-zero temperatures,Chaplenko noted, becauseminus-20 Farenheit is not anuncommon temperature."Because of such extreme

Dr. Adrienne Haw ley oi L'nion College, Cranford,(aught Spanish at the Lincoln After-School EnrichmentProgram. She is shown here with her students, back row:Arthur Dupras, Edward Ungarsky. Emily Goldstein andCaroline llawley and front row: Charles Mueller,Courtney Zenner, Melanie Haw ley. Jackie Dupras. AliBredlau and Kristin Ryan.

1977). the committee i possibilities, thermal in-members are Roger Tuthill i sulation is a real concern,"of Mountainside, the Rev ! he said.

The eclipse will take placeat approximately 9:36 a.m.and will have a duration ofabout two and three-quarterminutes. "That's more thanworth all the months of

Allen Tinker of Summit,and David and GloriaKuchinsky of Scotch Plains.

Following an in-vestigation of some 70 citiesin the U.S. and Canada, asite in Winnipeg. Manitoba, preparation and effort,"was selected for its op- ! Chaplenko said.

Dr. llawley leads a group in the game "BlindChicken", in which (hey respond to Spanish words theyhave learned. Courtney Zenner wears Ihe blindfold,while (left to right) Melanie llawley. Emily Goldsteinand Jackie Dupras try not to be caught.

College Commissions 50~ Year HistoryA 50-year history of Union •

College will be written to;

commemorate the College's't:o!den anniversary in 1983,.it was announced today byDr. Saul Orkin. college;president.

Commiss ioned as-historian is Prof. Donald •Haichle of Short Hills,.'professor of history at Kean |College of New Jersey, Un-1ion. Raichle recently,completed a history of KeanCollege ' i

L'nion College was'founded in 1933 as Union:

County Junior College as a jWPA Project. With an initial.enrollment of 243 students, it ifirst opened its doors in 1933 ! ductsat Abraham Clark HighSchool in Roselle.

The college, with itsUrban Educational Centers-in Elizabeth and Plainfieldand its community projects !throughout Union County. '•today has a total enrollment •of approximately 12.000students. These include

5.000 full- and part-lime I current president. Prior tostudents working toward: 1948. Charles Granville Coledegrees. ! and Dr. MacKay served as

In cooperation with Union ! deans of Ihe college.County Technical Institute, j U n i o n C o | ! e g e o f f e r sScotch Plains. Union = programs leading to the

Associate in Arts degree inliberal arts, with options ineducation, urban studiesand early childhoodeducation: biology, withoptions in agriculture andbotany, bacteriology,conservation, environ-

campus and the Urban I mental science. healthCenters. Union College j sciences, pre-medical oroperates a CETA-funded j pre-dental. pre-pharmacy.learning Resource Center in ; pre-veterinary and zoology';

business, with options in

College under contract withthe Union County Coor-dinating Agency for HigherEducation provides publiccommunity college servicesfor Union County in lieu of acounty college.

In addition to its Cranfordand the Urban

the Eastern Union CountyYMCA in Elizabeth, con-

a program at thepre-medical records ad-

. ministration and publicElizabethport Learning j administration; criminalCenter and will soon open a justice, with an option inSkills Training Center at 10 ; p u b 1 i c s e c u r i t yButler St.." Elizabeth. engineering, with options in

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Courses and other programs : environmental science andare also offered at high j engineering managementschools, hospitals, senior j a n d physical science,citizen projects and other jlocations throughout Union iCounty. i

Following its early yearsin Roselle. Union Collegeexpanded and in 1942 movedto Cranford, where itutilized the former GrantSchool at the corner ofSpringfield Ave. and HollySt. It relocated to its own 48-acre campus in 1959.following a SilverAnniversary DevelopmentFund Campaign whichresulted in the constructionof the Nomahegan Building.In subsequent years, theCampus Center, ScienceBuilding. Sperry Obser-vatory, MacDonald Hall, theHumanities Building, and

the Kenneth C. MacKay I scheduled for 7:30 p.m.Library and Learning | today at Rahway Hospital.Resource Center were j This program is givenadded. < annually during the holiday

In its 45-year history, 'Union College has had threepresidents: Dr. Kenneth W.Iversen of Cranford. whoserved from 1970 to 1974, and

In addition, the Collegeoffers an Associate inScience degree in "liberalstudies: exploring scienceand the arts," and as part ofthe Cooperative Program inProfessional Nursingconducted jointly with theSchools of Nursing ofElizabeth General Hospitaland Muhlenberg Hospital.Plainfield.

In conjunction with UnionCounty Technical Institute,Union College conducts

programs in dental hygieneand fire science technologywhich lead to an Associatein Applied Science degree..The college also offers

programs leading to cer-tificates in basic studies andintensive English throughits Institute for IntensiveEnglish.

Union College's associatein applied science degree isconferred upon students ofUnion County TechnicalInstitute who successfullycomplete the following two-year programs: Accoun-ting-date processing,computer science-dataprocessing. secretarials c i e n c e , c h e m i c a lt e c h n o l o g y . c i v i ltechnology, electromech-anical technology, elec-t r o n i c s t e c h n o l o g y ,mechanical technology,d e n t a l l a b o r a t o r ytechnology, medical recordstechnology, therapytechnology -respiratoryt h e r a p y , t h e r a p ytechnology-physical ther-apists assistant, andtherapy technology-occu-pational therapy assistant.

The written history of thecollege is part of anhistorical "package" beingprepared for the GoldenAnniversary celebration.Also in the works is an oralhistory, which is beingdeveloped by Prof. RichardSelcoe.

To Discuss Life Stress TonightA free program dealing

with the topic of "LifeStresses and Depression" is

season to help people copewith feelings of loneliness ordepression. This year'sprogram will be moderatedby Dr. Reinaldo Alvarez ofthe psychiatric servicedepartment. Also on the

panel will be Dr. ThomasVerrastro and N'ancymarieBride. RN, MA.

A question and answerperiod will be held to allowfor audience participation.The program will be held inthe hospital conferenceroom.

This is another in a seriesof monthly communityhealth education programssponsored by the hospital.

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Glee Club Christmas ConcertsThis Weekend at Area Churches

John Cook and Charles Acito, both of Weslfteld,demonstrate the trombone to students at Roosevelt Jr.High. The musical program was presented to musicstudents in the classes of John Josa and Miss CarolTincher.

Trombonists Share TalentsMusic students at

Roosevelt Jr . High wit-nessed the professionaltalents of two local trom-bonists recently when theypresented a programsponsored by the local"Sharing Talents and Skills(STS)" organization.

The two musicians, JohnCook and Charles Acito, areboth residents of Westfield.Cook, who demonstrated thebass trombone, is achemical engineer inresearch and developmentat Mobil Chemical inEdison, and is active as aperformer in this area.Acito. who demonstrated

the tenor trombone, is agraduate of Juilliard Schoolof Music and has performedwith (he bands of TommyDorsey, Ralph Flanaganand Xavier Cugat, as well aswith the National Orchestra.

The students heard aprogram of great variety,including duets and solosfrom the 15th to the 20thcenturies. D i f f e r e n ttechniques of performance,as well as the mechanics ofsound production, weredemonstrated for thestudents. The musiciansvisited classes of two musicteachers at Roosevelt • JohnJosa and Miss Carol Tin-cher.

Producer-Director Becky Khmann scans the TVmonitors as cameraperson Rachel Schulaner andaudioman Bill PI) lev film a "lire" commercial.

rCameraperson Jenny Schulaner and audioman DaveMiller film the action as production director Julie Dilloncontrols the TV' monitors.

STS IX ACTION: A recent visitor to Mrs. ShirleyNeibart's sixth grade class at TamaquesSchool was .Mrs.Sara Donavre of Westfield's S.T.S. Program. .Mrs.Donavre showed films of a Mexican bullfight and somescenes from Peru, including her visit to Machu Picchu.an ancient Inca city. Shown above with .Mrs. Donavreare. I. to r., Mike Falcone. Danny Jacobson, Allison Louisand Maggie Barton.

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The Westfield Glee ClubChristmas Concerts will beheld Saturday at 8 p.m. atthe Fanwood PresbyterianChurch and Sunday af-ternoon at 4 at the WestfieldPresbyterian Church.Tickets are available fromany Glee Club member, thechurch offices or at the door.

The club has moved itsconcerts from the highschool to churches, whichprovide a more intimate andaesthetic atmosphere,especially for the Christmasconcerts.

Glee Club programs havetraditionally featured sologuest artists on theirprograms. The move tochurch locations permits theclub to feature two localoutstanding organists.Karen L. Miller, director ofmusic and organist atFanwood PresbyterianChurch, will be recitalist onIhe Saturday eveningprogram, and AnnetteWhite, organist at (heWestfield PresbyterianChurch, will be the Sundayrecitalist. Joining Mrs.Miller on the program areviolinists Frances Lewis ofWestfield, Margaret andWarren Swett of Fanwood.cellist Beverly Ammann ofCranford and oboist PaulGordon of Plainfield.

Karen Miller is a native ofWestfield. She holds an A.H.degree from Vasser Collegeand did graduate studies atUnion Theological SeminarySchool of Sacred Music. She |studied organ with Wilma

Jensen and Robert Tripledin Westfield, with DonaldPearson at Vassar, andCharles Dodsley Walker atUnion. Mrs. Miller hasserved as organist inseveral New Jersey church-es and as organist andchoir director at WesleyanCommunity Church. SanJuan, Puerto Uico. In thecurrent job at Fanwood, shedirects a full program ofgraded choirs, three hand-bell choirs, and serves asorganist. She was formerlya piano theacher in West-field. accompanist for NewJersey Opera Theatre, and amember of WestfieldMusical Club. She resideswith her family inMillington.

Annette White, organist, anative New Yorker, has abachelor of music degree |from Eastman School of iMusic where she studiedwith David Craighead. Hermaster's degree is from theSchool of Sacred Music.Union T h e o l o g i c a lSeminary. There shestudied with Dr. VernondeTar. In addition to havingserved churches in NewYork, New Jersey, andCalifornia as an organistand choir director, she hasaccompanied many choralgroups in this area. Whitehas been organist and choirdirector at Marble iCollegiate Church in New jYork during summerseasons, and recently wasfeatured organist at *MunnAvenue Presbyterian |

Church, East Orange, for awidely-acclaimed presen-tation of Elijah.

The Glee club wasfounded over 50 years agoand grew and flourisheduntil its membership con-sisted of about 100 activeparticipants. The mem-bership has since declineddue to the changing patternsof entertainment. However,attesting to the zeal of itssingers, the club hasoutlasted many others of itskind in spite of its smallernumbers and is still a greatsinging organization.

Although the club bearsthe name of Westfield, itrepresents many of thesurrounding towns and

boroughs. The men comefrom such towns asMountainside, ScotchPlains, Linden, Plainfield,North Plainfield, Summit,Roselle and Fanwood. Someof the men are from theMendelssohn Glee Club ofPlainfield which wasdissolved a few years ago

It was decided this year tohave the club change withthe times. It is thus in-stituting a move from theWestfield High School tochurches, which provide amore intimate and estheticatmosphere, especially forthe Christmas concerts.

The club is under thedirection of Edgar A.Wallace.

Replaced O.R. Equipment

Expected to Save $10,000When the air conditioning

equipment in the operatingsuites at Rahway Hospitalreached 20 years old, it hadto be replaced: And thanksto a recently changed codeof the Department ofHealth, Education and Wel-fare, the hospital was able toinstall new equipment whichis expected to save anestimated $10,000 annually.

According to WilliamAnderson, plant servicesadministrator at thehospital, "The old equip-ment utilized 100 percentoutside air in the operatingsuites. This means that airwas brought in from Iheoutside, heated or cooled asnecessary, and thenexhausted back to theoutside. This was expensivefrom an energy standpoint."

The new equipment, inaccordance with the

"Minimum Requirements ofConstruction and Equip-ment for Hospitals andMedical Facilities," per-mits the recirculalion of 70percent of the air already inthe system and only uses 30percent outside air. "This isexpected to save us about$10,000 each year in energycosts," said Anderson.

The replacement of equip-ment took place during afour-week period in AugustIhis year at a cost of$180,000.

According to Anderson,the change in the code cameabout as a result of researchthat proved that the aircould be safely circulatedwithout the spread of in-fectious material.

The restrooms andsterilizers in Ihe operatingroom still use 100 percentoutside air.

New Law LimitsPensioners' Benefits

A new provision of thesocial security law mayhave an important effect onthe reitrement plans ofworking couples if one ofthem works in public em-ployment not covered bysocial security, Robert E.Willwerth social securitydistrict manager inElizabeth said recently.

Under the old law, thespouse of a person whosework was covered by socialsecurity could get a benefitas a husband or wiferegardless of his or herpension income fromsources other than socialsecurity.

Under the new law, theperson's social securitybenefit as a dependent orsurvivor will be reduced bythe amount of any pensionhe or she receives based onhis or her own work in publicemployment not covered bysocial security. This workcould be for the Federalgovernment or any State orlocal government.

Under the exception in thelaw, a governmental pen-

sion will not affect a socialsecurity dependent orsurvivor benefit if theperson becomes eligible forthe pension beforeDecember 1982, and at thetime the person applies for

I or becomes entitled to aI social security benefit as ai dependent or survivor, the'. person could have qualifiedj for that benefit under thei alw as it was in January1 1977.1 In January 1977 men hadto prove they were actually

, dependent on their wives tobe eligible for benefits as a

' husband or widower.\ Willwerth said.i A governmental pensionj will have no effect on aI person's social securityI benefits based on his or herj own work covered by social, security.! More information aboutj the effect of governmentali pensions on social security

benefits may be obtained atthe Elizabeth New Jerseysocial security office,

j located at 342 WestminsterAve., Elizabeth. !

Robert McNallv

Robert McNallyReports to Chanute

Airman Robert McNally,son of Mr. and Mrs. John M.McNally of 321 HighgateAve., has been assigned toChanute AFB, 111., aftercompleting Air Force basictraining.

During the six weeks atLackland AFB, Tex., theairman studied the AirForce mission, organizationand customs and receivedspecial instruction in humanrelations.Coropletion of thistraining earned the in-dividual credits towards anassociate in applied sciencedegree through the Com-munity College of the AirForce.

Airman McNally will nowreceive specialized trainingin the aircraft equipmentmaintenance field.

The airman is a 1977graduate of Westfield HighSchool and attendedRutgers University, New-Brunswick.

Is Truck StopNeeded on Pike?

"Is a truck stop needed onI the New Jersey Turnpike? "

That question will beasked of thousands of truckdrivers traveling the New

] Jersey Turnpike the week ofDec. 18.

A total of 225,000 cardswill be handed to truckers atthe Turnpike's toll plazas.The cards contain a series ofquestions seeking pertinentinformation on exits, miles

' traveled on the Turnpike: and off the Turnpike to get

to one's destination, andfrequency of Turnpiketravel.

The truckers will also beasked if they would use atruck stop, its location,services needed and type ofcargo The cards are to bemailed in self-addressed,postage-paid form, thenpunched by data processingand put through a computerspecially programmed forthe survey.

Truck drivers notreceiving cards may obtainthem from the PublicInformation Department ofthe Turnpike Authority,New Brunswick, N.J. 08903.

THE WE8TFXEU) (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, -DECEMBER T, 1»7» P«f» *T

New Master Plan For Union College?Union College has

'slipped into a newera. effortlessly and withouta cry" and therefore needsto establish "an updatedpertinent realistic MasterPlan," to organize taskforces to begin a self-studyfor the 1981-82 accreditationvisit, and to create acollegiate house or forum toconsider "vital issuesconcerning" the college. Dr.Saul Orkin, president, saidat a recent all-collegeconvocation in the CampusCenter theatre.

Dr. Orkin toW members ofthe faculty, staff andstudents that there aremany external forces alwork "determining ourdestiny." He mentioned theCommission to Study theMission, Financing andGovernance of the CountyColleges and HigherEducation and ChancellorT. Edward Hollander's callfor a statewide Master Planfor Higher Education asexamples of these forces.

"Weare being called uponto adapt to new conditionsthat will change the wholecomplexion of this in-stitution, if we have theimagination and Ihe will toheed the call," Dr. Orkinsaid. "Of course, we coulddecide to do nothing, toremain as we are. But I amcertain that even thatdecision will bring change,too, because the social andeconomic forces that arerunning will shape ourdestiny whether we chooseto act - or react • or freeze inplace."

Dr. Orkin said there arefour forces at work: the"inevitable enrollment dipas the number of 18-year-

olds declines from now untilthe beginning of the 1990's";fewer full-time students andmore part-time students;restricted funding on thestate and county levels, and"'an increasing reluctance ofhigh school graduates to goto college as the formereconomic advantages of acollege degree quicklydissipate."

"It is clear that we mustre-examine our mission and 'purpose in light of the newconditions in the con-.stituency we serve," theUnion College presidentsaid. "In the '30's. MO's, and'50's, we matched the needsof our clientele withprograms that satisfiedthem. We must be certainthat the same thing willhappen today andtomorrow."

Dr. Orkin said at theconvocation that theaudience for highereducation will never againbe the relativelyhomogeneous cohort of 18-year-olds, "but is now theentire population and theeducation interest of this

] population has been greatly; underestimated."

'It is incumbent upon us todecide what kind of in-stitution this should be andthat requires, discussion,planning, and decisionmaking," the Union Collegepresident said.

Dr. Orkin said that bycomparision with otherindependent institutions ofsimilar size. Union College"is strong and healthy."

"But we are an anomaly:private but supported withpublic funds," Dr. Orkinsaid. "Independent yet parlof the public community

college system of NewJersey. Can it. should itcontinue as it is? What kindof institution should UnionCollege be in five years? In1983, the College willcelebrate its fiftieth an-niversary. Our respon-sibility is to determine byour action and resolve whatkind of college this will be inthe second half-century ofits existence."

Dr. Orkin said that centralto Union College's presentstatus as an independentinstitution serving in lieu ofa County College in con-junction with Union CountyTechnical Institute is itsrelationship to the UnionCounty Coordinat ionAgency for HigherEducation and the Institute.

"By law and by contract,the College is tied to theAgency as well as to theInstitute. It is by means ofthis arrangement that theCollege is joined to the Statesystem of two-year com-munity colleges," Dr. Orkinsaid.

To Help AdultsReturn to SchoolA special and free course

designed to help adultsreturning to school learnhow lo handle s tudy-related skills will be con-ducted at Union College inearly January.

Parl of the College'sContinuing Educationprogram, the course in"College Study Skills" wiJIbe held in two sessions onThursday evenings, Jan. 4and 11, from 7 to 9 p.m.

YULE VALUECultured Pearls set against blueenameled petals and green enameledleaves capture the delightful forget-me-not. They're part of our specialKremenu collection, exquisitelyfashioned in rich, long lasting14 Kt. Gold Overlay.

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Fall '78: Variations on a Country ThemeThe Chase Ticket. The ticket pocket is a tableful addition to ourtraditional, soft-shouldered model

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Page 28: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

THE WXSTFTELD (NJ.) LEADEB, THr&SDAV. DECXSCMB *. 1»T»

GMs' Soccer DivisionCelebrates First Year

Tbe Girls' Division of theWSA celebrated its foundingyear with an awards dinnerat L'Affaire in Moun-tainside. Approximately 350people were in attendancefor dinner and awardpresentations to the topthree teams of the leaguewhich comprised of a totalof 10. One of the highlights cithe evening «as a presen-tation of a miniature pair ofsoccer shoes to every tearr.participant, donated by theAdidas Company IT.celebration of the first >earof the Girls' Soccer Division

In attendance a! :hebanquet uas the r.e*president of the WSA. DonAlpaugh: vice president.Eldred HaUey. director ar.dimmediate past presider.t oithe WSA Peter Latarlaraand Jim Dodd. chairrar. ofthe re/erees for theassociation. Chairrr-a^ c-.'tbe festivities. GeorgeR o g e r s - , w e l c o m e deveryone, introduced thehonored guests and askedfor a special rour.d of sp-plause for Dennis Kinselia.the girls' division director,and for his wife. Pat. who

togetfier had £:\<?n huridredsof hours ur.seifiskiv socreate lh;s cuv-ston.PrestderU Aipsuth spoe;<? ofshe division's rr.ar.y ac-corcphshjr.rntf 3no be in-dividually :hirjcec each 0'the 1<> cosctes. aii oc - * t oreceived jppU'jje Jirr.Dodd related mM :r.tr:cje:<?sof referee str.e-z'Sr.r.zEveryone ir. £::er«isrx.-<? « i ssurprised that ".r.ene » ere 4->£2rr,e<p'.^>e-i f i t r ; Sun-isythroughout :he >;-c;erseasor; :r. Wej'.f-eld. ailrefereed -jr.cer Jirr.'s

Margaret O'Hara of theCVr.sipsoes. Lynn Biiman ofthe Grasshoppers. FrifdPr:scoe. coach of theScorpions and RichardPryor of the Lady tugs

An absence of women inthe fail program ussdiscussed 3nd DirectorK:rs#lia e\t<?r>6ed an open-.r.v.uticn for assstarve ir,DCX: jeer's program to al!:r.e pare.-.:* i~ sv.er.dar.oe asAril ss to she ir.anvres:-ier.:j of oar eorrjr.uruty."The iyoces* of i pros-am

such is ours." stated

Holy Trinity WinsBasketball Openers

or.tro: a no rr.a.t-v le:': •»".'_". i Kt.'selU- due irir, la rgererter u.ndcrs:^r.i.-.j: ..x thereferees r«pc:s:t-:I:::es

•J* firs: plice S::r.jier» b>-±eir coach. Johr. •^o.sesThe seco-: pUee le-arr.. :neFire:~:e>. '-ere preser.:edlroph:e5 b> *-he;r casch.Derj.is K:nse-l:i The :h:rcpUce Cr:cie:--' coach. Pe:erKrikliwy. ;r.:r.>djcec h;s:earr. and £«ve therr. :r*?:rawaxcs Hcr>:-rab!e rr.er.'jor.was gi\er. :o Ccscr. Bc-a::>.'or the e\ce::en: pisj of tr.eLocus:.-. Verwr, R;ce. coachof '.he Beetles. Pe:erHoulihan of in-e CaterpiiJsrs.

Westfield RangersLose in Semi-Finals

Wall Township provedthey were a better teamthan the Westfield Rangersby defeating the Rangers 4-0in State Soccer Cup" semi-finals. The Rangers werenot disgraced by any means.in fact, they fought backright to the final whistle

Bob Lister, who hascoached this Division II!team along with Ralph'Anthony, who couldn't get tothegameonSaturday, cameoff the field a mighty proud !

man after reaching thesemi-finals of the New-Jersey State Cup •Fourth ;place is not bad at all." says

Bob. ou: of almost ;<>"'teajns L;s:er c:d add •>:*other thing. "These 12 and13 year olds have had thebiggest soccer experience oftheir your.a careers, andmyself and Ratph were gladto be a pars of it."

Westfield Rangers rosierincluded: Chris Walsweer.Dominic Frasso. Bradt'pham. Billy Macaluso.Tom Miller.' Ed Haag.Danny Fit2gerald. RonJohnson, \ifchil Sir.gh. MikeSchuvart. Dave Ryan. MilanDiPierro. Todd" Lauster.Matt Petnk and EricMunzir.ger

Rizk, Garbin and KesslerExcel in Tennis Classic

A total of 71 boys andgirls, ages 7-17. represen-ting 24 cities and towns inthe Planters New- JerseyTown Tennis League. 'played in the sixth annualstale-wide '•ThanksgivingClassic'" at the WoodbridgeRacquet Club on Nov. 25 in 'four divisional groups.

On a hot streak. Ramy ;Rizak of Westfield upset top- 'seeded Gary Sbendell ofRoseile. 8-6. in the finals of 'intermediate boys

A future star. 7 year old -Demon Desquitado ofScotch Plains lost s hard-fought match to Joseph :

Pacelli of MiddJetown. 6-3.In the advanced girls

•semi-finals. Sue Liebl of

L'nion ousted KarenBronikowski of ScotchPlains 8-1- Two WestfieMyoungsters, talented WendyGarbin and energetic MarcyKessler were s-emi-finalistiin the youth girls divisionMarcy won three rr.i tcfc-es inher first taijT.arr.ent.

The indoor tournamentwas a feature of the year-round program of inter-'ownteam matches 2nd •air- :name-fits for youngstersfrom 51 communities in ihe ,state. Any municipality iseligible to form a tearr. toplay in the league in 'J7es u m m e r m a t c h e s .Organization is provided bythe Youth Tefiris FcwI-datiorj of V.'esif;e3d

A Gift for thatLittle Someone

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Thn mejnrriwnt poro-r tsonly S3.00 60HCT tnd ftmi km 1 greet jrft.— ortfer number 2160

BRIDGE OPENTERPRISEPOSTERTTM 00* ftrto onty r»tt«icfc-dMlenail pecttr M r cr»r!«to In t ro* * * STAflTHEKA Mgfiry lougm mm andprtZKj eo«»etoc» nun »nd 1tupar huit-eofcr ttrtssreonv*n«tlon pi«c*. TJinImposing *nd pov«rfulMan* show* action on UKfttttg* with Kirtt and & p « iIn command «rhU« tlttEntarpriM orUU an uivCtuflad ptonal UmttK!numear mt iaM*. G«l younwftUttrwylMtl

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measure :o the parneipation0-; the z&y,:s as «el; as the> our.fi ;ad:es "

The ever.:n£ er.dedr-rorr.pily a: j p m . ^ssched'jied. -*::h ever\

something horr.e TheAdidas sboc-s. ob-ta;rsed b>Chairman Rogers. «i!irerr.;r.d the firis U theirp:ower year :r. :he WSA" M o r e ' . r r .por 'a r . ' iy .however, the £:r;s »:;i carry•.v::h iherr; a fee:;r,2 of sellaccorr.piishrr.fr.* and anuroer?!ar.d:ri£ of :earr, piay.so necessar> m today'sirir*iii cycle." he 5.a;d

AquaspriteAward to

Mar>* KingEach year '-he coaches of

•he Westfield YWCAAquasprites select a teammember for their GoodCitizenship award '^h;ch ispresented to the tearr,member uho fives ibe mcs',of herself in and <xt! of the-fool' for u-,e good (A theteam

This year the ausrd •*er.xto Mary Kir.e. a audent a:Edison Junior High end ihedaughter of Mr."and .'.trsFrank KIR? 0! 9ilBoulevard

Head Coach LorraineFaiulio of Clark rr.aoe thepresentatioR. In ;^rt shesaid that tbe a-*ani MESunanimous arr.or.g thecoaches and that "Mar.»eflt out of her -»sy to helpthe younger swimmersThat she accepted al!decision? of the coach*?even when they effected heradversely. If it is good forthe team it is good for Mary.She is the coaches dream ofa terri/ic team .T.err.t«r.The world could use rr.oreMaiys."

Tenni* Assn. PlansJanuary Social

The West'fieid Tennis .Association vk-jl! boM itssecond arr.ual social Jan '.3a: Irjr-.an Riccuet Chib ir.Edison. There v.ilj be rouodrci:n teaiis to give mem-bers the opportunity !o rr.eeisorr.e new partners for tbeupoistrig =*ssor_ and aoJii'. •J.iih aU the trjn-mir.E£. Tris is the c-nJys«-iai !if 'ATA has curingthe "*i.-.:.sr rr-onti-^.

Trtz oz&i^Tf: Ice res^r-vaticcis a tx-z. 35. thev wlUt« or a fr-si cwr;e firsts-errea bisa. ij] Tensis

Fine ball control anddefer.se contributed to the»in by the 5th and 6th gradehoys basketball team. HolyTrinity's 2-1-2 defense was'.he mam factor in their firstwin Fine defensive effortsby Tim McCabe. GregFrieerio. Mike Ahern. TimBrennan and Chris McGinnerabied Trinity to contain5: Anne's Garvood1. tallerboarvi men arxi offensiveguards

Trinity's offensive bal!control and s!v>ctin£ in thefirst half was also a bigfactor in the win Fine of-fensive balance in theshooting department wasshared by Mike Ahern with 5points. Tirr. Brercrsan - 4.Greg Frigerio - 4. RichDeesan • •! Good benchback-up was provided by

jCharles Ramsey. Jayi Fitzgerald. Rino Cachione.' Brian Murphy. Mike Ward.• Sam Rapuano. Tom Foxton.; Mike VeIJa and Pat Marte.Brian Quinn. Keith Brennanand Scott Powers helpedkeep the team in the game

j Final score - Trinity I'- *'•Anne's 12

; In the second garr.e. Holy: Trinity Tin and 8th grade• boys won their openeragainst St. Anne'> 55-21Fine offensive efforts byChris Nolan. Jerry McCabe.Bill Degnan. Terry Jacksonand Jim Romagnano helpedto quelch St. Anne'sdefensive game in t.oe firstperiod, enabling Tnr.uy toutilize their complete' benchline-up.

As in the first gatr.e. gooddefense was the ke\. Good

j defensive performances[ w ere shown by guards Tom! D o m b r o w s k i . J e r r y: y.r^be and Bill Degnan.,' Control 0/ the boards byChris Nolan. Terry Jacksonand Jim Romagnano gaveTrinity the defensive ad-vantage. Fine bench' effortswere turned in by MikePadula. Tony Pugliese. TomMcGinn. Miie Growney and

' Joe Mazucca. Rounding outthe Trinity bench were SeanMcKenna. Tony Jennelte.Michael Reeves and BrianDursee. High score for thegame was held by BillDegnan with 14 points,followed by Terry Jacksonwith 10. Jim Romagnano - 6and Jerry McCabe andChris Nolan with 4 each.Final score - Holy Trinity 38.St. Anne's (Garwoodi 21.

Photo by Oi arles MunchI'p. t'p and Away! Holy Trinity's Jerry .Me Cat* (221 eludes St. Anne's defender toscore opt of his two basket*. Trinity's Billy D*gnan (13) and Terr) Jackson (40) box-inanother SI. Anne's defender.

Porpoises Win OpenerThe Y VCA "B" won its

first meet Saturday againstSomerset Hills "B" Squadat Westfield with a score of116 to 68.

Westfield took an earls-lead and held it all the way.

Stacy Kuchulis and KerryLucke were double winnersfor the Porpoises. Kuchulis.9-10. in the breaststroke andbutterfly: Lucke. 11-12 in thebackstroke and butterfly.

Other first place winnerswere Wendy Wyckoff in the9-10 freestyle: MichellePepper in the 13-14freestyle; Kathy Gradwohlin the 15-17 freestyle:Margaret Latartara in the

: 11-12 breaststroke; Sarah iPowell in the 13-H !breas t s t roke ; DebbielConabee in the 9-10backstroke; Lynn Tomforde •in the 15-17 backstroke; !Theo Gude in the 15-17 Ibutterfly. !

Results: •Individual Medley: 12 and i

under-l.T. Reinman 1.22.1; •2. M. Latartara: 3. E. Ward:ages 13-17 - I . E . Furray j2A9A: 2. T. Gude: 3. K. '•Hynes. j

Freestyle: 9-10 - 1. W. IWyckoff 38.; 2. D. Conabee; !3. S. Skinner: n-12 - 1. J.Lambie 30.8; 2. D. Novello;

Photo by Charles .MunchI'll Take That! Hol> Trinity* Jim RoroagBUJO out-jumps two St. Anne's defenders tograbr(b<ntxi prior to storing? of his (points. Racking him up are Chris Nolan 1241 andTerry Jatkson <4«'.Hol> Trinh\ beat St. Anruf'* of Garwood in their season opener. J8-II.

Bell Svstem Notes Contributions to State

Bowling Results

vijjabir iron; Ja-ZJTZZ- SiS Leoai Ave.

BeO System corr.parJes bNe**' Jersey, uhich employmore than 63j»» persors.c&ritri'&'jted over r*o biUioncollars to the state'seconomy las: year for taxes.'.rages, goods god services

Slate aod local taxes paidby the System in 1977 'MzUriSI-W/iS&.OM. or two perc-er.tof aL1 such taxes paid in NewJersey for tbe year, ac-cordisz v> a repvr. or, theBell System in the stateprepared by New JerseyBeB.

The Western ElectricCompany, the BeD S>-sttm"srrj.rjuic c i/jnri£ £r/j sup*piyunit, p&ii mo-re than 3.7t»j

New Jersey suppliers a totalof S270.226.-XX' for pur-chases. Payments forprod^jcts ar.d services byother Bel! Sys^ia com-panies amounted toil22.iY7.Vyj.

The Bell System in NewJersey is represented byNe-A jerse;.- Ee:; Telephone: Seeks Guard's Spot

Peterson of

during 19T7.Some 256.500 AT4T

shareowners also live inNew Jersey. They were paida total of' S23U16.000 lastyear in dividends on58.552.500 common and2.919.-SO0 preferred shares.

g GeneralDepartments of theAme.-.ean Telephone andTe!egraph Company.

Tbe employe-** of thesecompares earned a total of51.252.170.W-0 in wages

FRUSTRATED -teitii pm»r Inventory selection,self service storesand uninformed sales help?

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can make your holiday shopping a pleasant, easy experience. Jackand David know their inventory and ke«p a fully stocked store foryour convenience. They take pride in helping you select the perfectgift for your holiday list. Check out these and other great values forthe holiday season:

Weekly Value SelectionCasteUo Vicchio Chi»nti CUssico - S7.W - mm

Aliberti Spumante - $2.99fifrhHartley & Gibson's Sherry's (imported from Spain)- S2.99fi«ti

Chateau Grand Village - S3.35 firmDelia Scala Lambrusco • (fun liter) si.99

Discount by the case.

Don't see v>hat you want? Stop in andlet us know. Well order it for you.

GIFT SETS-HOLIDAY BASKETS'GIFT WRAPat no clurge

peting for a guard positionof the university's women'sbasketball team. She is inher third season on thevarsity squad.

Gibbons a 'Winner1

Dennis Gibbons, son of-Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gib-bons of Westfield. is therecipient of a special awardentitled "Tbe Will to Win" atSeton Hall University for hisoutstanding will to win onthe university's footballteam while maintaining his

; scholastic honor status. Heis a 1977 graduate ofWestfield High School wherehe also played football.

• Early Birds'. ' W L. Kutzenco 37 15' Seely 31 21Kass 28 24

iKasAa 26'; 25' :' Chapman 26 26I Cragg 25 271 Drees 2k 28' Harms 23 29i Cheesman 22U 29'-i Reinhardt 19 • 33! Doris Reinhardt game.:210. series 503: Bettie; Zimmerman game 203,.series 568; Series: D., Kaseta 508. J. Petersack;503. L. Cheesman 532. D.; Erhard 553.j Triangle league

W LBrookmans 66 30Stars 57 39Nolls 53 -J3Baldwins 51 45Eagles 46 50Jolly Rogers 44 52Spoilers 43 53Heitmans 24 72High game: Pete Way - 212:high series: Pete Way - 547.Bob Brookman - 504.'

Pin I'p Girls

; Walker. Sawickij Cammorato' McKennaj Riccardi

Evansi Preston; Tyler

W3128282321212020

High team game

L i17 I20;20 ;25 i27 i272828

and

3. E. Ward: 13-14 - 1. M.Pepper 1.07.8: 2. K.Sugameli; 3. L. Jackson; 15-17- l.K. Gradwohl 1.07.9; 2.L. Lauritsen: 3. V. Dinger.

Breast: 910 - 1. S.Kuchulis 48.0: 2. S-Skinner;3. C. Marshall: 11-12 - 1. M.Latartara 42.1; 2. J. Cooper:3. S. Jensen: 13-14 - 1. S.Powell 1.26.8: 2. N.Haushalter: 3. E. Douglas;15-17 - 1. E. Furray 1.25.3;2. D. Poflak; 3. L~. Moss.

Back: 9-10 - 1 . D. Conabee.49; 2. D. O'Brien; 3. S.Koed: 11-12 - 1. K. Lucke39.1: J . Lambie; 3. J .Beglin; 13-14 - 1. K. Haynes1.19; 2. A. Wyckoff; 3. M.Green: 15-17 - 1. LynnTomforde 1.20.3; 2. K.Kinney.

Butterfly: 9-10 - 1. S.Kuchulis 50.6: 2. W.Wyckoff; 11-12 - 1. K. Lucke39.0; 2. T. Reinman: 3. J.Cooper; 13-14 - 1. L.McNamara 1.31.4; 2. M.Styler; 3. D. Cortlella; 15-17 -1. T. Gude 1.21.6; 2. K.Hugger.

Relay Results: 9-10 •Westfield - 2.50.6 Wyckoff,Conabee. O'Brien. Doyle:11-12-Somerset Hills; 13-14-Somerset Hills; 15-17 -Westfield - 2.08 Kinney,

game:Erhard high series. 5©.

Fabettes leagueW L

Jarvis Drugstore 34 18Fugmann Oil Co. 284 231 ,!Joe's Market 24 28TiffanyDrugstore234 28'rThe Jolly Trolley 23U 284Baron'sDrugstore 22'2 294 iHigh games and series: J.Fraley -192,525: R. Glassey'- 192. 513. ;

PAL to ResumeGirls' BasketballThe Westfield PAL will

hold its clinic for girls'basketball, as it has done inprevious years for gradesfour to seven, beginning inJanuary for 10 weeks atRoosevelt Junior HighSchool.

Additional details will beannounced in the nearfuture.

Tbe US. Secretary ofLabor is nominated by the.President with the consentof the Senate and is thePresident's chief adviser onlabor matters.

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Page 29: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Cage Clinics BeginThe fourth grade West-

field Basketball Associa-tion clinic program began atRoosevelt Junior HighSchool Saturday.

Dick Brown. clinicdirector for the fourth gradeb-ballers, put the more than75 boys and girls through anabbreviated clinic skillsprogram and discussed theentire year's events.

The next meeting for thefourth grade is Saturday.Dec. 16. between 12 noon and3 p.m. Final registrationswill be taken before theclinic begins, and WBAshirts will be distributed. Itis important that all thoseinterested attend becauseevaluations will be held and

. teams partially assembled.The fifth and sixth grade

WBA clinics will start this

Saturday at Edison JuniorHigh School. The sixthgrade program, directed byEd Haag Sr. will run from9 a.m. to 12 noon, while thefifth grade program,directed by Bill Jeremiah,will run from 12 noon to 3:30p.m. Final registrations alsowill be held for these twogroups and again thoseinterested must attend toget placed on teams afterevaluations are conducted.Shirts will be handed outprior to the sessions.

Registration forms areavailable in each gradeschool's principal's officeand information concerningeach program may be ob-tained from the directors ofeach clinic, Larry Ritchie of•116 Highland Ave. or AlLinden of 905 Stevens Ave.

Kelly Scott DoubleWinner for PorpoisesThe YWCA Porpoises "A"

team lost its first meet lastSaturday to Toms River in aclose and exciting com-petition, the final scorebeing determined by the last

. relay. Mary Beth Mills andKim Genkinger scored 1stand 2nd in the 12 and underdiving competition, whileCarol Hay and KirstenConover placed 2nd and 3rdin the 13 and above. KellyScott scored a double win forWestfield by taking 1st placein 13-14 freestyle and but-terfly. Our other first placeswere Natalie Hay. 11-12freestyle: Erin Scott, 15-17freestyle; Jennifer Frawley13-14 breaststroke: PattyWysock. 11-12 backstroke;Ginna Field. 13-Hbackst roke; PamelaB i e s z c z a k . 15-17backstroke; JenniferHorner. 11-12 Butterfly.Westfield's 11-12 and I3-"Hfreestyle relay teams alsoscored firsts. While notaffecting the scoring, the 8and under team of Christinaand .Marianne Caroe. andJennifer Comstock. AmyRumphrey, and Maureen

• Kinney performed very wellin the individual and relayevents.Results:

Diving: 12 and under - l.Mills 95.60 W; 2. GenkingerW; 3. Childs TR.

13-17- l.DixonlM.OSTR;2. Hay W; 3. Conover W. Ind.Medley: 12 & under - 1.Lindberg 1.U0 TR; 2.Wysock W; 3. Strode! TR.

13-17 - Tremuth 224.4 TR: i

2. Bieszczak W: CarchiettaTR.

9-10 Free - l. Foley 31.1TR; 2. Haskamp TR; 2.Tyrell W. Breast - 1.Haskarap 44.0 TR: 2.Williams W; 3. Jude TR.Back - Strodel 39.0 TR: 2.Mills W: 3. Jude TR. But-terfly - 1. Foley 33.3 TR:Patton TR; 3. Mills W.

11-12 Free - 1. Hay 1.044W; 2. Heckel TR, 3.Heymann W. Breast - 1.Heckel 37.1 TR: 2. AndersonTR; 3. Horner W. Back - 1.Wysock 36.0 W: 2. RussoTR; 3. Heymann W. But-terfly - 1. Horner 32.5 W: 2.Hay'W; 3. Lentini TR.

1*3-14 Free- 1. Scott 1:00.9W; 2. Frawley W; 3. BookTR Breast - 1. Frawley1:24.3 W;- 2. Kinney W; 3.Patterson TR. Back - 1.Field 1:15.5 W; 2. Book TR;3. May W. Butterfly-l. Scott1:10.4 W; 2. Wagner W; 3.DeWitt TR. '

15-17 Free- 1. Scott 1:00.8W: 2. Patterson TR: 3.Kirby TR. Breast - 1. Wolfe1:17.6 TR: 2. CarchiettaTR: 3. Horner W. Back • 1Bieszczak 1:10.5 W; 2.Britting TR; 3. PattersonTR. Butterfly • 1. Tremuth1:04.9 TR: 2. Horner W; 3.Friberg TR.Relays:

9-10 Toms River11-12 Westfield 2:00.4

Trani, Hay, Horner, Wysock13-14 Westfield 1:53.7

Field. Scott. Frawley.Wagner

15-17 Toms RiverToms River 97 Westfield

93

• i

YM Blue Fins WinWestfield's two YMCAl

Blue Fins swim teams werevictorious last Saturday asthe "B division" teamdefeated Princeton by ascore of 116 to 74 and the "Edivision" team traveled toSomerset Hills to defeattheir Y team 118 to 70.

Highlights of the homemeet against Princetonincluded two first placefinishes by Mike Bacso inthe 13 to" 17 year old in-dividual medley, time:2:15.2. and the 15-17 But-terfly, time: 58.6. Bacso alsoanchored the winning 15-17year old freestyle relay.Other swimmers in therelay were Tony Meyers.,Tom Rokosny and BarrorvJaffe. Jack Ribecky won the<11 and 12 breaststroke.-time: 36.5. and the 11 and 12;freestyle, time: 1:01.2.:Ribecky also anchored the-winning freestyle relay for;his age group. Other!swimmers in the relay were;Walter Kempner. JeffAhlholm. and Chris;Aslanian.

Other first place finishersfor Westfield in their homemeet included: JamesMorgan. 13 and 14 freestyle,and Barron Jaffe. 15 to 17freestyle. In breaststrokeevents. Matt Bagger finish-ed first in the 13 and 14 agegroup and Tom Rokosnytook first place in the 15 to 17age group. Walter Kempnertook first placein 11 and 12backstroke. The 13 and 14freestyle relay was won byChris Isaccson. Ed Smith.

Matt Bagger and JamesMorgan.

Highlights of the BlueFins 48 point win overSomerset Hills included firstplace finishes by DavidLighthtser in the 15 to 17freestyle, time: 56.6. and the15 to" 17 butterfly, time:1:03.4.

Other first place Blue Finsincluded: Joey Rosolanko.12 and under individualmedley. Bill Weimer 13-17individual medley. GeneAhlfeld. U and 12 freestyle.David Luchenbach. 13 and14 freestyle. In breast-stroke, first place went to:John Meier. 10 and under.Paul Savin. 11 and 12. FredAhlholm. 13 and 14. and JeffZeikel. 15 to 17. Bobby Adlertook first place in 11 and 12backstroke and PeterBowman took first in the 13and 14 backstroke. Adlerand Bowman also wereanchormen for the winningfreestyle relay teams intheir respective age groups.Swimming in the 11 and 12freestyle relay with Adlerwere Brian Byrnes, GeneAhlfeld. and JerryRosolanko. Swimming in the13 and 14 freestyle relaywith Bowman were JohnAdler, Fred Ahlholm andDavid Luchenbach.

Perry Coultas, coach ofthe Y Blue Fins, was im-pressed by the wins: "Theydid a really fine job and Ihope that their speed andspirit will continuethroughout the season."

Demonstrating a creative use of materials al hand areMrs. Diane La Fon <left) and Mrs. Judy Kollon with their"paper bag puppets." The two recently showed studentsIn the Decrfield Media Center for fourth and fifth gradeshow their puppets are made and used.

-THE WESTFIELD (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7. 1918

Joyce Bauman presents trophy to Carole Brown, clubchampion.

Carole Browne Scotch Hilla champAt the annual awards

luncheon for the Women'sGolf Association of ScotchHills Country Club Nov. 14.the following awards weregiven:

The club championshipwas won by Carole Brownewith the runner-up beingJoyce Bantz. In the classicdivision. Betty Valley tookfirst and Joyce Bauman.second. Joyce Bantz wasmedalist and Jo Scofieldwon low gross for the year.The Memorial Trophy waswon by Carole Browne.There was a three way tiefor first place for ringers.Carole Browne, Sally

Claussen and Jo Scofield.Audrey Said won second andNancy Jackson, third. TheChairman's Cup awardwinners were: "A" flight.1st. Jo Scofield; 2nd,Mildred Landers; "B"flight; 1st. Natalie Tracey;2nd, Mary Seiler; "C"flight; 1st,' Beth l-oesser;2nd, Gladys Primeau. KathyBlatt and Audrey Said bothreceived trophies forheating pro John Ballinger.

Officers for the comingyear will be Joyce Bantz,president; Betty Monroe,vice-president; AudreySaid, treasurer: and JoScofield, secretary.

JV Cagers LookFor Better Season

By Jeff McGillThe Westfield High J.V.

basketball team this year isunder the tutelage of firstyear head coach RobertMintz.Tomorrow at 6:30p.m. in the Varsity gymagainst Rahway. he willlead his Blue Devils to beginthe task of trying to improveon last year's 912 record.

With three scrimmagesunder their bell, the Devilsseem primed for the seasonopener. Coach Mintz hastried to instill in his playersthe defensive philosophy towhich he adhere. The Devildefense has been applyingpressure to the opponent'soffense and capitalizing onthe mistakes they haveforced.

The offense, led by higmen Rick Yawger. JohnPerry and Kerry' McDevitt,is beginning to jell. Mostmembers of the team havecontributed to the scoringcolumn as each has at-tempted to take the best •percentage shots possi-

The Devil startingfive consisting of EricCarter, Mark Jenskins. RickYawger, Kerry- McDevittand Jim Morris will not bethe only ones to see actionthroughout the upcomingseason. Coach Mintz feelsoptimistic because hisbench strength allows himto substitute freely, knowingthey have the talent andcapability to handlesituations. Those playerswho will see a lot of actionvia the substitution routeinclude Rich Cotter. JohnPerry. Rodger Thompson,Tom Ripperger and DanBrady.

Coach Mintz feels theteam possesses speed andsize, and the needed ex-perience from the juniorsand looks for the Devils tobe competitive againsteach opponent this year.

The members of the 1978-

WHS Cagers Open SeasonAgainst Rahway Tomorrow

By Steve Sherwyn

The Westfield High Schoolvarsity basketball team,with new head coach JoeSoviero at the reins, hostsRahway to open its 1978-79season tomorrow night at 8p.m..

Soviero replaces NeilHorne, who took the headcoaching job at SomervilleHigh School. Previously,Soviero had been the J.V.basketball coach at West-field and Home's assistanton the varsity level.

This year's Blue Devilsare faced with the challengeof overcoming their lack ofheight in order to improveon last season's record of 7-16 and fifth place finish inthe six team AmericanDivision of the WatchungConference.

To overcome this height

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handicap, this year's BlueDevils will stress pressuredefense according toSoviero. He added thatWestfield will use suchdefensive varieties ashalfcourt, three-quartercourt, and fullcourt presses;and a trapping man to mandefense. If the defense is aseffective as Westfieldbelieves and hopes it can be.it should lead to manyturnovers. These turnovers,in turn, besides preventingthe opposition fromshooting, should lead to afast breaking offense andthus high percentage shotsfor the Blue Devils ac-cording to Soviero.

"We will just have to waitto see how effective thisdefensive strategy is;however, the Blue Devilshave overcome one majorproblem which last year's

team had, a lack of ex-perience, "he said I-astyear's team consisted ofonly two seniors and onejunior who had previousvarsity experience. Thisyear's squad has eight sen-iors with varsity ex-perience.

Of these eight seniors, fivewere starters at one time oranother last season andfigure to be the probablestarting five for this year's -version of the Blue Devils.Keith Colicchio, the biggestplayer on the team at 6'3",will move over from theforward position to thecenter spot.

Ron Allen and ChrisBauman will occupy theforward sports to completethe frontcourt, while JimGilmartin and Jeff Brownwill round out the hack-court. With Bauman in the

lineup, the Blue Devilstechnically have threeguards on the floor asBauman played as muchguard as forward lastseason. This extra guardshould also give the BlueDevils extra help in theirbattle against their lack ofheight as it increases theirhall handling skill.

Senior Bob Noonan andjunior Tony Hall will at-tempt to break into thestarting frontcourt in ad-dition to being substituted infor Allen Bauman. andColicchio. Seniors SteveHartnett and Sal Caramicowill be doing the same in thebackcourt.

Many believe that Rahway will be the second besilearn in Union Countybehind Union this season.They are led by their senioi6'3" forward Rus Stewar

Ps«e 29

nd their senior guard KricRodgers. The Blue Devilsdid not face Kahway lastseason.

FRKE THROWS: Union isconsidered by many to bethe number one team inUnion County and one of thetop teams in the state thisseason. The Farmers returnfor starters including 6'8"senior center Mike Sigl. Theother three returningstarters are Rich Moore.Jim Jones, and ClaytonTerry. Westfield does, notface Union until Jan. 16.

Westfield's first twogames should be a goodindication of what type ofseason it will be for the BlueDevils. Linden, whom theBlue Devils play on Tuesdayin Linden, and Kahway art'considered among the topteams in the county. Linden,who was ranked number twoin the,state last season, willnot be as strong upfront thisseason due to the lose ofAaron Howard andRoosevelt Peeples, but thebackcourt still must bereckoned with.

1979 Westfield High J.V.basketball team this yearare Dan Brady, Eric Carter,Rich Colter, Mike Elliott,Charlie Frankenbach, JackHall. Mike Hayaski, MarkJenkins, Kerry McDevitt.Jim Morris. John Perry,Tom Ripperger, Todd Sea.Rodger Thompson, and RickYawger.

One final note: KipSolimine was chosen asmember of this year's teamnot an injury keeps him

I from competing during the> season.

| Christmas Shoots jAt Skeet' Range j

; Two events are scheduled |! this month at the (rap and ;; skeet facilities Lenape j; Park, Cranford. i

The Christmas Turkey i• Shoot - the Remington !; Handicap in skeet will be

held on Sunday while the37th annual James L. SmithShoot in trap will be held onthe following Sunday, Dec.17.

Union County's trap andskeet range is open each

\ Saturday and Sunday from' 12:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.Events are called at 1:30p.m.. and entries close at

| 2:30 p.m.

j Watchung Ramblej For Hikersj Saturday!i Members of the UnionI County Hiking Club andi their guests will meet at the

Trailside Nature andScience Center, Coles Ave.and New Providence Rd..Mountainside, at 10 a.m.Saturday for the six-mileWatchung Ramble. Theleader of this hike will beselected from the par-ticipants.

need snow tires...if you expect to be driving in drifted or packed snow this winter.Tire experts generally agree that radials are no substitute forwinter tires. A wide snow tread with a deep, open, aggressivedesign is still the way to "go in snow."

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G78-14H78-145.60-156.00-15L6.85-15F78-15G78-15H78-15L78-15

Black

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Tht n*w m»int*n*no*faf*v«r (unary raquirwrtfular chocks by <h« MTsution. It't b»ch*d in wr•nd tKora't no chargefntullition- Sw ui ttm

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WESTFIELD

UNION

ROSELLEBANKAMERICARQI PARK

NORTHPLAINFIEID

SOMERSET

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SERVICE

Mon.-Fri.8to 6Thurs.8to9

Sat. 8 to 6

MgA.Thuc.8to8Tm.W«d.Friato6

Sat 8 to 2

Mon.Thur.Fri8to9Tu«.Wed8to6

Sat. 8 to 4

Mon.Ttiur.Fri. 8 to 9Tua.W«d.8to7

Sat. 8 to 5

343 SOUTH AVE(NEXTTQA&P)

232-1300

Rout* 22 • 619.5*39(COR. SPR INGFIELD RD.)

Westfield Ave • 241-4800

Route 22 East &Mountain Ave. 561-3100

INTEGRITY EARNS CONFIDENCE'

Page 30: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Pfcft M THE WESTKIE1 D (NJ.) LJLADEB. THIKSDAY. DECEMBEB 1. 1»T«

Winter Athletic SchedulesWESTFIELD HIGH SCHOOL

BOYS' VARSITY and JV BASKETBAJLLDec.8 Rahway Ho-e 6:30 ?JTI.Dec. 12 Linden Away 3:45 p_~.Dec. 15 Scotch Plains Away 6:30 p j r .Dec. 19 Seton Hall Away 6:30 p ja .Dec. 22 Scotch Plains Ho-'.e 6:30p.r.i.Dec. 27 Varsity Chris ur as Tojsr.;s:.er.:

at Roselle Catholic —play Hudson Catholic

Dec. 28 Varsity Chriii.Tiii Tourr.i-~cr.at Rosellt? Ci'.r.ohe

Dec. 30 Varsity Chr-i'.xas Tourr.i."er.at L'r.'lo:! Hiih School

Dec. 27 J.V. Christrr.ai To'-rr.ar-.entat Ro«?:!<? Cj'.holic —play Roielle Ciihobe

Dec. 28 J.V. Chrii-ir.is Tcumi.-r.e:-.:at Roselle Cathchc

Dec. 30 J.V. Chris:raaj Tcurr.i^cr.:at Union Hici School

3 Plainfield " Away 3-45 p . ~ .6 Bridgewsur Ei.-: Away 6:00 pjr.:.9 Elizabeth Horse 3:45 p.~.12 Cranford Awiy 6:30 p.r=.16 Union Horr.e 3:45 pjn .19 Roselle Ca-.holic Away 6:30 p.=i.23 Plamficld Horse 3:45 pjr.:.26 Johnson Repc-r.al Away 6:30 ?.n:.30 Union " Away 3:45 pjr..2 Cranford Horr.e 6:30 pj=.6 Elizabeth Away 3:45 p_—.10 Linden Hcrr.e 6:30 psa.22 BrideewawrWesi Horze 6:30 p_-r..

11:30 ajn.

Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Feb.Feb.Feb.Feb.

Dec.Dec.Dec.Dec.Dec.Dec.Dec.

GIRLS" VARSITY and J.V. BA5KETBALLS1215IS212227

PlainfieldDayton RfEonalScotch PlairaRoselleRahwayLindenChristmas T o u m

HomeHomeAwayAwayHorr,?

Dec. 9Dec. 16De,-.27J in . 6«'ar.. 10Jan. 17Jar.. 20

7:00 o.~. Jaa. 30Feb. IFeb. 3Feb. 5Feb. 10Feb.IsFeb. 2cMar. 3

I>k\ 27Dec. 2?

10131620232630

Feb.13Feb. 16Feb. 23

Feb.24Mil. 2-Var. 3

WINTER TRACKSt. Joseph's Ir.v.it

I'r.ior. CV-r.'.y ReliysCarir . i i Hives ^ir^ss

Hone 3:30 p jn .

Jan. 12Jan. 16Jan. 23Jan. 26Jan. 31Feb. 2Feb. 6Feb. 9

Woodrow VViJsonCranf erd, OrangeScotch Plains, TernUBasJdr.c Ridge, AnninMiUburn

Roselle ParkCranford. Hillside

HomeAwayAwayHomeHomeHomeAwayHome

3:45 pjn.3:45pjn.3:45pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45pjn.3:45 pjra.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.

I

Ho—.e

L'r.:o" Cozr.ty Chi=?urAh:?Avrty

N ; —£. • frsey L: v.:.£S- r.C

3:30 pjn.

3:30 pjn.

3:30 pjn.

ROOSEVELT JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOLBOYS1 EIGHTH GRADE BASKETBALL

Dec. 12 Linden..McMar/Ji Home 3:45 pan.Dec. 14 Union., fowamfch Away 3:45 pjti.Dec. 19 Clark. Kurap/ A way 3:45 pjn.Jan. 10 Scotch Fi^ns. Park Home 3:45 pjn.Jan. 19 Scotch FliL-a. T<?rrJl Home 3:45 pjn.Jan. 24 Scotxh riains. TemU Away 3:45 pjn.Jan. 29 Cranford. Orange Away 3:45 pjn.Feb. 7 Scotch Plai.-j. Park Away 3:45 pjn.

Readability BuiltInto 1977 Tax Forms

and J.V. WRESTLING

Virs:ty I--rr^r.c:-.: it ElizabethCc-r.ty

ri.v:iti"i«"ay AwaySite-:: :iill Assyt>rlli't"_r HomeCs-di: ?.:iie AwayL'"i-" Aff-y

•*. Ho=eAwayHo-eHo=eAwayHcrceHomeAway

er.: Hor'e

Scotch FU r

o:4o p.rr..3:45 p.T..3:45 p.T..3:45 pjr..3:45 pjn.3:45 psr..

istrict Tourr.arzer.tc-ror^j Tc-J.rr.iricT.Rose-'.ie Csiholic

Horr.e

at

Dec. 29Scotch Plair^ - play PisCB^way 6:30 psr.

Ch.nsira.as Toumaser.t 2:Scotch Phir.5 — r>lay -.vir_".er ofScotch Plains or So. PlnQd.

Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Feb.Feb.Feb.Feb.

Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Feb.Feb.Feb.Feb.Feb.Feb.Feb.Mar.

Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Jan.Feb.

Feb.Feb.Mar.

3510121723263126914

5101216172427312710121421

EUzabethUnionPlainfieldUnion CaihoMcCranfordJohnson Rwrlor.HiiladeLindenUnionScotch PlainsCranfordElizabeth

HomeAwayAwayHoseAwayHorseAwayAwayHorneHomeHomeAwav

BOYS' SWIMMINGElizabethMountain laxesCranfordPlainfieldSt. Joseph'sWaidlaw

AwayAwayAwayAwayHomeHomeAway

Union Catholic HcnieUnion HomeCherry- Hill Ear. HomeUnion County Chajnpior-shipRahway AwayWatchung Hills ' AwaySeton Hall Horse

23&242& 3

6:30 pjs.or S:O0 p rr

3:45 pjr.3:45 p.m.3:45 p_n.3:45 pjn.3:45 pj^.3:45 pja.7:00 5>JS.3:45 pjn.

3:45 pjn.

3:30 ?j=.3:00 pjc.3:30 pj=.3:30 pj=.3:00 pj=.3:30 pja.2:30 pj=.3:00 pjn.3:00 pja.3:00 pjn.1:00 pJE.3:30 pja.7:30 pjn.3:30 pjs.

War. 16-17 S^:e Tvr.ili It<12'*~}T. Gym. FVj^ortor. L r.:vcri..ty

EDISON J17CIOR HIGH SCHOOL

BOYS' NINTH GRADE BASKETBALL

4:00 pjn.

4:00 pjn.6:30 pjn.4:00 pjn.1:00 pjn.4:00 pjn.6:00 p jr..4:00 pJr..6:00 pjc.6:00 p.rr..6:00 pjr..6:00 pjn.6:00 pjn.6:30 p.m.6:00 I>JE.-

1:OOJ>JT;.6:00 pjr..6:00 pjr..-1:00 PJT,.6:00 p.rr..

BOYS' NINTH GRADE BASKETBALL3 4Dec. 13

Dec. 14Dec. 19Jan. 3Jan. 5Jan. 12Jan. 16Jan. 22Jan. 31Feb. 2Feb. 6Feb. 9

Scotch r^rii .Terrii lHillsideRo&eV.eJohnsor. ReponaiRoseJlc Ci'.holicCra-ifori.OwrsceL'aion. BurnetLinden .'.LN'anu;

RahwiyScotch PLairj.TemllScotch FLLTJ. Park

AwayAwayHomeAwayHomeAwayAwayAwayHomeAwayHomeHome

3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn..3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.-3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.

Jan. 3Jan. 4Jan. SJar,. 11Jan. 16Jan. ISJan. 22Jan. 25Jan. 30F e b . lFeb. 5Feb.14

GIRLS' NINTH GRADE BASKETBALLBaskir.j F.iJce. AnrdnUnion. B^LTietCranfcri. HilladeUnion, K3Ai.-r.eehCraniori. Orir.ceScorch Plii.is. Park

L'nion. B—-r.e'.Scotch Pla:rj. TerrillCranibrd. Hi'.U;deUnion. Ki^irr.eehCraniorc. Orar^e

AwayHomeHomeAwayHomeHomeAwayAwayHomeAwayHomeAway

Dec. 12LVc. 15<'*.-.. 3JiT.. 5

916

Scotch Flair;-. ParkUr.ion. Burr.*:Hc«::eCrar.fori Htllsde

Jar.Jar.Jar,^ar.Jin. 29'an. 31

Feb. 7Feb. 9

Dec. 15^in.4ir.. 5

2=?.. 10.'in. ISJan. 24Feb. 1Feb. 5

26 Scotch Pliira. Psrk

Crar^ford.St. ?.!ir>--sSootch r l i i

Hor.rHorr.eAwavHomeHo=eAwsyAwsj-AwayHo~eAwavHo~eAwav

Jan. 3Jar.. 5Jan. 9Jan. 17

3:45 p jr..o: 4 o p jr..

2:45 pjr..•5 . * Z. n

3:45 p Z3:45 r jr..3 :45?- , .3:45? jr..3:45 pjr..3:45 pjt:.

Jan. 19.'IT.. 23,'i.-,.26Jan. 30Feb. 2: eb. 6

BOYS' EIGHTH GRADE BASKETBALLl"r.:or.. Bjmet Away 3:45 rjr,.Scotch Plair^. Park Home 3:45 pjr..Lir.aer.. So'til Away 3:45 ?jr..Scotch ?^ira.T«rri2 Ho-^i 3:45 i>j=.Lir.irr.. V.C.V.MUS Aws>- 3:45 pjn.5>:-ot.:h Plains. Pari: Awav 3:45 pjr..Crir^crd.H Uiside Home 3:45 p_- .Crar-'c-rd. Ora.-iic Home 3:4 5 ? J -

NINTH GRADE WRESTLINGUnion. K^'.viir.eeh HomeScotch T'.^rj. Terriil HomeUnion. Bj_-r.e: AwayScotch Pl^.-j.Piik AwayRahway AwayPisoa:awsy HomeLinden. Mc?'!i.-.us AwaySummit AwayRoscile Pari: HomeCranford, Orar.ee Away

Credit TransfersClarifies College

3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45pjn.3:45 pjn.

3:45 pjn.3:45 p.m.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.3:45 pjn.

GIRLS' NINTH GR.-VDE BASKETBALL-Jar,. 4Jar.. 5Jin. £

Jan1117

358101217192931.9

1416

Stale

GIRLS'SWIMMINGMontclairBridaewawr EastRed Bank R«ior^JLV.ion CatholicBridsewatcr EastCherry Hill EastGovernor Livi-unor.

Aursy 6:00 pjs.Ho=e 2:00 pjr..Away 5:15 pja.Ho=e 3:30 pj=.Hocie 2:00 pj=.Hose 3:00 pjes.Away 5:00 pjs.Away 3:30 pjn.

Sunns!*. Home 3:30 p j^ .Union County Chispi-orjhip

a; Elizabeth High Scho-s!' 7:00 pjn.Waichuae Hills Hox? 3:30 OJ=.New Providence Awjv

^ar;. 23-iar.. 25Jar.. 30Feb. SFeb. 24Feb. 16

Jan. 3Ji.-.. 10

Crir-'crd. Ori-^eS-rotch ?'j±z<, Piji:

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NESTH GR.AJDE WRtSTLtSGHose

Scctch Plains. Pirk Awsv

3:45 pjn.•S:45 OJTJ.3:45 pjn.

-i: 4 5 p JTj.

3:4 5 pjr..3:45 pjn.3:45 pjrj.•3:45 pjn.

3:45 T)jn.

Svjie.-.ti who enroll inprJf.'a.TiS designed -oprovide ".hem fu!I-:irr.eer.pioyrr.er.: at \he er.d of a'.wo-yesr period canr.'Ot arrdil-jcod not ei:;«ct to be able::- trsr.ifer all creditseirr.ee ;o & four-yearc:llege or -r.iversity. Dr.U-crurd 7. Kreisnan. %-icep:e--::rr.: for academicii'.iin !•:-: Ur.ic.i ColJege.Cranford sa-d Thursday.'.:£h: a: i n.fnv.r.e of * eUr.ior. Count> Board ofChosen Freeholders.

Dr Ki-risrr.ir.. -ho is also.r.'.ersr. dear. •:•:' academicaffairs ic-r Ur./.r, CountyTechr.ical Jr.i'.ifj'.e. ScotchPlsirii. 5.3.:cf ht was com-rr.estir.g cr; ='-a presentedto A? Freer.:loers on Aug |24 de.i;:r.-2 •itl". the xrzns- •ferebiMt>r :•: credit for :

iccccr.'.:r.2 cwjrses offereda- fCTf U.-.cer Unior,

Dives for CornellD:ver Johr; Kra>:ors •-.

'.>s-.:»:d •-•::: re^rr. :,:• v,:he C-,.--e:: l-.-.jvcrsit

' & 10 State Championship — Lrxre-ceTil2e

1 1

WeekThursdayDecember 7

&ThursdayDecember 14

Friday: December 8

&Friday

! December 15

MorxtayDecember 11

&MondayDecember 13

TuesdayDecember 12

&TuesdayDecember 19

WednesdayDecember 13

&

WednesdayDecember 20

WESTFIELD RECREATION COMMISSIONWINTER

rf December 7 thru 13

POTTERYART FOR FU«MUSIC WORKSHOPSBASKETBALL

ROLLER SKATING

CRAFTSGRAPHIC ARTS

METALSSPORTS NIGHTS

COLUMBUS: Supsn-iscxiEDISON: Sujxrmorc

PROGRAMand December 14 thru 20, 1978

9:30-12 Neon3:15- 5:00 PV3:00- 4:30 PV7:3-5-10:00 ?'•'

3:00- 4:30 PM

3:1»- 5rO0P}.(3:15- 5:00 PM3:15- 5:00 PM3:15- 5:00 PV7:30-10:00 PM

ioveph Silinard & Dirk:

E!m StrtrtVi'wfcshopElrr. Str«» 3ft3 FloorEdiicnElm Str»t Gym,

Young Aduia

Ta-najjue-i Gyro3 , 4 & 5tri Grades

Edison, for TesroEdisonRooseveltEdison

LninsRonald Barone & Rayryxvd Bfrers*

ELMST: Superriio.1 Wsurwn Bft*Tt» 6 Rob*n Bttwntt. Jr.

TWIRLIfJGVi'OOOWORKIKG

WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL

POTTERYART FOR FUNFINE ARTS

3:15- 5:00 PM3r00- 5:00 PM3:15- 5:00 PS?7:30-10:00 PM

9:30-12 Noon3:15- 5:00 PM

PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP 7-.30-10:00 PMVEN'S VOLLEYBALL

CRAFTS

SCULPTUREPOTTERYWOMEN'S VOLLEYBALLJAZ2 BANDCOMMUNITY CONCERT

BAND ,WESTFIELD PHOTO-

GRAPHIC SOCIETY

7:30-10:00 PM

1:15- 3:00 PM

3:15- 5:00 PM

3:15- 5:00 PM7:30-10:00 PM7:30-10:00 PM7:30-10:00 PM7:00- 8:00 PM

8:00-10:00 PM

7:30-10:00 PM

Elm Street GymRoo»»eU > . Hir iVierrMd Sr. HijhElm Street Gym

Elm Street Workshop '•Elm Street, 3rd Floor '

Elm Street, 3fd ROOTElm Strwt, Gym

Red Cross,f at Senior Citizens

Elm3rdFk>Of '6, 7 6, 8th Grades

Elm AuditoriumElm 3rd FloorElm WorkshopElm Street Gym •Edison

Edison '

Elm IPROGRAMSOPENTOVfESTFIElORESIDErYTSONLr.NOFEESCHARGED j

KOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT THE WESTFIELD RECREATION DEPARTMEMT IMUNICIPAL BUILOIMG. 232- 8000 EXT. <8

Authentic ColonaJLantern Just

For Voting Us!

College's contract withI C n . the college confersthe associate in appliedscience degree uponstudents who satisfactorilycomplete programs at fCTIand is responsible foracademic oversight of theseprograms.

"I l would seemreasonably clear that if aperson is preparing for full-rirr.e employment at the endof a :%vo year degreeprogram, the kinds ofprepart:on ar.dthe kinds ofskills learr.ed at '.he end ofvhai period may be quitecif'eren: from the kinds ofskills thai would be attainedin a program where aperson sper.ds two years atone institution and thenplans or, going on to spendw o years at another in-Hitutiwi '.o complete the'oaccalaureate degree."

Dr Kreisman added thatthe collegiate status of anUstitutior; has ••absolutely ..no imf>aci" on v,hether ornot credits are accepted bythe receiving institution.

•Basical ly, it is thematerial that is involved in .those courses and its ap-propriateness at the level ofpreparation at which the 'student is that determinesuhether or not anotherinstitution will accept thosecourses ." Dr. Kreismansaid.

The Union College officialadded that Union CountyTechn ica l I n s t i t u t e scatalog specifically listedthe a c c o u n t i n g - d a t aprocessing program as ]preparing students for;employment. *

i t seems to me to be |important for the citizens to.understand that individuals >who select a program which Iwill prepare them for em-jployment need to realize itha't should they change)their career objective somejof the work which they have)taken may not be in keeping ]with their redirected goals," :Dr. Kreisman said. j

Taxpayers who this yearfind Internal RevenueService form 1W0 and itsrelated schedules easier toread and Fill out can thankLeo Campbell and a team of

•• IRS writer-editors.; Campbell, a doctoral

candidate in reading at the1 Rutgers Graduate School of; Education, served as an IRS

consultant from last March' to September, helping that' agency streamline and; simplify the instructions for

filing the 1978 income tax.A native of South

I Plainfield now living inNorth Brunswick. Camp-bell, as a reading specialistfor the IRS team, rewrotethe 1978 version of the in-structions and tested itsreadability against the 1977instructions

By using shorter wordsand sentences, employingcontractions and avoiding" l e e a l e s e " whereverpossible, he changed theinstructions from an overallmid-high school readinglevel to a ninth-gradestandard, the averagereading level of anAmerican adult.

Few changes were madein the 1M0 form itself sinceit was rewritten last year .and received favorablepublic response.

The editorial team in theForms and Publications Di-vision of the IRS changedthe graphic design of the in-structions, utilizing morewhite sjace and bolder typeheadings for reading ease-

Other changes includedplacing information in achronological, line-by-lineorder, eliminating the needto flip-flop between crossreferences. Campbell said

For instance. 10 steps (orpreparing the return, whichwere lumped together at thebeginning of the in-structions, now appear inthe line-by-line setup whenthey are needed

Campbell said more usehas been made of dependentclauses at she start of each •instruction. "These "ifclauses let taxpayers knowright away if the line appliesto their circumstances." hesaid

Taxes Made Simple • The IKS. with help from Rutgersreading specialist Leo Campbell, simplified the in-structions for filling out this year's IWOform. .Vow if theycould only do something about the arithmetic!

Certain extraneous in-formation also has been .deleted. Campbell said,where it was determined ;that the taxpayer did not 'really need to know thedefinitions of various termsin order to accuratelycomplete the line

E l i m i n a t e d u e r e •numerous references to andan explanation of the term"zero bracket amount"because Campbell and his .team felt that since (he ;concept is built into the ta\tables, readers need not beburdened with the term •"Zero bracket amount"rep laced " s t a n d a r d •deduction." in the 1977 lax .year

Similarly, the term • ;• 'community property •state" was broadly definedin the 1977 instructions, butnow here w ere the eight suchstates listed The new in- .struclions simply list the 'states and refer the tax-payer to another publication :for details i

Language alterations in |the text include such :

changes as "in excess o f to•more than." "exclusively"to "only." "elect" to••choose." "entire" to "all."

Several readability for-mulas were applied in theproject. Campbell said,including one developed byDr. Edward Fry. director ofthe Reading Center at theRutgers Graduate School ofEducation

Readability, said Camp-bell, measures the supposeddifficulty of such languagevariables as word andsentence length, obscurityor clarity of terms_. and thefrequency with whichcertain words are used.

One of the most difficultaspects of the task. •Campbell said, was to try tosimplify certain conceptsgoverned by strict legalguidelines.

" Because of the com-plexity of some of the taxlaws, some things just can'tbe simplified beyond acertain level." he said. "Butwherever we couldn't dropbureaucratic jargon ortechnical terms, we tried toexplain them."

Marta Sterrett. 24. scales a utility pole with ease using new. small-sized climbing geardeveloped for women installation technicians at New Jersey Bell. Victor I'ossien. aninstructor at New Jersey Bell's corporate training center, and .Marta, right, comparethe differences in climbing gear. The new climber is being used by u omen at the centerwhere installation, cable splicing and repair technicians receive their basic training.

N.J. Bell Gears Up for WomenAsk any New Jersey Bell

installation technician andhe"l) tell you it's no easytrick climbing those utilitypoles to hook up phoneservice.

Imagine that you're five-foot-three. 115 poundssoaking wet. and the gearyou have to wear on the jobwas designed for huge,burly men. Now you havesome idea of the logisticalproblems faced by womenwho work as installationtechnicians.

To help the increasingnumber of women hired byNew Jersey Bell as in-stallation technicians - andsmaller men who performthe same job - the BellSystem came up with some

• new climbing gear.; The climber, as it iscalled, is an iron stirrup

.' with a spike, or gaff, forj digging into the utility pole.! II is strapped around both| the foot and leg and enablesI the technician to climb a\ pole which doesn't haveI rungs or steps.

A new. smaller version isI going into use at New Jersey ; CII!Vi Bells corporate training '

"No One Can Hold aCandle To Westfield Ford"

Westfield Ford319 NORTH AVENUE WESTHUD FV.O'iE 6*S • 6300

products engineeringdivision in Springfielddrafted specifications forthe supplier whomanufacturers the climbers

j for the Bell System.Zelins said "he polled 215

: women installers in mid-; 1975 for their opinions on the! equipment. Based on the1 answers, four smaller

climbers Mere developed

< center in South Plainfield. > ™m '°Vr . B e ' ! companies.! where installation, cable ! M e P lc,ked t h e o n e 'hat(splicing and repair tech- ! r e c e iyed the most favorable\ nicians receive their basic i r e ' ' i e 'A S-

training. The redesigned D .o e s 'h,^ n e w climberclimber for women ac- ! ™ k e a <MJ<*eW.

{ commodates a smaller fool ' wM a r l a Sterrett. 24. of

J and leg. The gaff angle is | M°n-u>Uwn. a n iRSp||ation! altered to make climbing * ecnnician for more than! easier, faster and safer ' • l o u r -v e a r e- "links so. One ofI . . . . . . : a dozen women at New

A lot of women were .Jersey Bell to test thes , e r i ° u s . Problems j modified gear, she gave Jhestandard climbers"! new climber the best en

j ^ ,u« j«^ ldP . Zeins. West-jdorsement possible SheUrn Electric engineer who a s k e d for the first pair ta

designed the modified a r r i v c j n New Jersey andclimber. Western Electric's took them to work. "

Passport PhotosIN COLOR

WHILE YOU WAIT SERVICEWESTFIELD CAMERA & STUDIOPortrait and Commercial Photographers

121 CENTRAL AVENUE 232-0239

Page 31: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

Should Student Athletes Get Credit for Sports Participation?Should student athletes be

exempt from physicaleducation classes duringtheir active competitionseason? Prompted by aproposal submitted' byMichael McCarthy, thestudent representative on|Ihe State Hoard of jEducation, the State Board iis expected to take action j

three arguments beingadvanced in favor of per-mitting student athletes tosubstitute their competitiveinvolvement for physicaleducation classes. The firstargument is that par-ticipation in athletic events •duplicates the kind ofphysical activity and skillstaught in regular gym

next month to determine]' classes Proponents of thiswhether local districtsshould be permitted theoption of adopting thisapproach. The State Boardhas already givenpreliminary approval to theconcept, which has thebacking of numerousstudents throughout thestate.

Forceful arguments onboth sides of this issue have

argument (eel that athleteswould do well to devote -more of their school time toacademic subjects sincethey are already receivingexcellent physical fitnessand skill development ex-periences as a result of theirsports participation. Sincethe athlete is only excusedduring his or her activeseason, he-she would either

made the student athlete j participate in physicalexemption question of thei e-ducation for the other two-most c o n t r o v e r s i a lchallenges the State Boardhas faced this year. Becausethis issue is one whichdirectly affects all studentsin our public schools. •citizens should be aware of;these arguments and what!the board's decision nextmonth will mean in theirown communities.

There are essentiallv

thirds of the year, or wouldhave the beneifls of two orthree different sports andthe learning that ac-company them. Accordingto this arguement. if a localschool board feels its phy-sical education program isso valuable that everystudent must participate, itcould continue to requirethat participation under the

former mental patients.More information isavailable from Ed Murphyor B.J. Adams

Borrow

Urges Viewing Of TV SpecialThe board of directors of i formation and referral

the Mental Health ! se r v ic e . s u p p l i e sAssociation of Union County ! educational programs to thereminds residents that a I public, advocates for im-special film. "Lovey: A proved care and treatmentCircle of Children. Part II," of the mentally ill. andhas been scheduled for supervises and trainstelecast by CBS from &-11 volunteers to work withp.m. Wednesday. Starring iactress Jane Alexander, this ;is a sequal to the "Circle of iChildren" special, which'told the story of Mary IMacCracken. volunteer- it u r n e d - t e a c h e r of|emotionally disturbedyoungsters !

Vivien C. Hardy, jpresident of the Mental'Health Association of UnionCounty noted that"programs like this are an !excellent source of publiceducation on mental health |topics, as well as out- •standing dramatic per-'formances. It's the type o(program we not only sup-port but stronglv promote."

The Mental HealthAssociation of UnionCounty. 615 North Broad St.,Elizabeth, provides an in-

Habla Espanol?

Habla usted Espanol. orwould you like to try thelanguage out on some realSpaniards?

A two-week trip to sixcities in Spain will be con-ducted as part of UnionCollege's three-creditcourse on "Spain: ItsCulture and People." Thetour, which begins Jan. 2, is

• open to members of theclass and to the generalpublic.

Under the tour guidanceof Prof. Helene Roholt-Moen, associate professor inthe college's modernlanguages department, thegroup will travel to Segovia..Madrid. Seville. Granada.Cordoba and Toledo. I

Prof. Roholt-Moen said jthe tour will be more than a |visit to museums and archi-!tectural sites, because she !intends to emphasize inter-action with the Spanishpeople. She had conductedstudents on 19 tours all overthe world in the last sevenivears.

terms of the local optionproposal the State Board isconsidering.

Critics of the exemptioncharge, however, thatphysical education classesteach students a variety ofskills, many of which are"lifelong sports." such asgolf and tennis. Athleteswho are exempted from allphysical education classeswould not have the benefit ofsuch a comperhensivephysical e d u c a t i o nprogram, according to thispoint of view.

A second argument infavor of the exemption isthat it would enhancephysical fitness training forthe less athletically inclinedstudents. Those in favor ofthe exemption charge that acertain elitism now existsamong athletes by virtue oftheir visibility, skill andpopularity with otherstudents. In cases wherethese athletes use physicaleducation classes as ashowcase for their advancedabilities, average studentsoften feel intimidated and asa consequence do not fullyutilize the physical

I education opportunitiesi available to them. Accor-! ding to this argument.phy-I sical education classes are| most important for thestudents who need them

! most, the non-athletes.i On the other hand, op-! ponents of the exemption: feel that the elite status of! athletes would only be in-' creased by granting them; such "privileges" as] exemption from gym class.| In response to critics whoj charge the exemption wouldI result in similar exemptions

for students in otherdisciplines such as scienceor -English, proponents ofthe change suggest as theirthird argument that thephysical education sub-stitution is not analogous toacademic situations. Astudent who puts in time onthe school newspaper, forexample, could not be ex-cused from English underthis argument. sincejournalism does not teachgrammatical constructionor the development ofliterature. Sports, on theother hand, bring to aculmination the skills andcapabilities studied inphysical education classes.

In a policy adopted at itsDelegate Assembly, theNew Jersey School BoardsAssociation has gone onrecord in support of a localoption for exemption ofstudent athletes fromphysical education classes.

As Michael McCarthy haspointed out. "The studentsof New Jersey have timeand' again voiced theirsupport for such a measureon the grounds that it wouldprovide more time forhomework and keep student

\ .

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athletes from becoming looexhausted physically duringthe week." McCarthy, whowas chosen to serve on theState Board by the StateStudent Council, noted thatin its meeting at MonmouthCollege October 24th. at-tended by some 500 statestudent leaders, a resolutionwas passed in favor of theexemption and a similar -measure was the first "bill "passed at Boys' State thispast June. <

New Jersey School Boardsfeel that this is essentially astudent option issue whichwould benefit athletes aswell as those students whoneed extra help in gymAlthough teacher unionssuch as the NJEA havechallenged the concept ofathlete exemption becauseit would cause schedulingproblems and could result inthe loss of some jobs forgym teachers, the schoolboards point out that thiswould not necessarily be thecase. If they felt it was in thebest interest of the students,individual local boardscould opt to retain existingpersonnel and reduce class-size.

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Cultural Board

Mini-ExhibitMrs. Elizabeth Pate,

chairman of the. UnionCounty Cultural' andHeritage Programs Ad-visory Board, has an-nounced that the business-Industry committee of theadvisory board will displaya mini-exhibit."UnionCounty Mart-Then andNow," in the Union Collegeauditorium, Cranford, onSaturday evening. Theexhibit will focus on thegrowth of business andindustry in Union County,and may be viewed duringthe special Festival of theArts performance thatevening.

-THE WESTFIELD (NJ.) LEADER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1»TS P«C> Jl

Saturday is "do it" day inUnion County. That's theday the Central New JerseyLung Association requestsarea residents who have notanswered their ChristmasSeal appeal letter to returntheir contribution.

Mrs. Carole Reynolds andL. Thomas Snead, chairmenof the Union effort, said thatthe association needseveryone's help to maintainand expand its programsand services.

"Before people becomecompletely involved inholiday activities," thechairmen said, "we urgethem to take a few minutesto write that check forChristmas Seals and returnit to the Lung Association."

"Do It Day" For Seal Drive

People once believed that wearing their coats inside outwould ward off evil!

ARE THEYOPEN TONIGHT?

Phone ahead and save. | H&M Jersey EM

Reynolds and Snead saidthat follow-up mailings tothose who have not yetreturned their annualdonation are now beingdelivered by area postmen.

The chairmen noted thatthe public should not regardthe follow-up- notes as a"bill" but rather as areminder to those who haveput off mailing in theirdonations.

"The Christmas Sea!

Campaign," Reynolds andSnead said, "is Iheassociation's primarysource of income to supportits year-round patient andcommunity services, publicand professional educationand anti-smoking efforts."

Those who have notreceived Christmas sealsare invited to contact theCentral New Jersey LungAssociation, 1457 RaritanRd.. Clark.

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Page 32: VrlSTRClD, H a. THEWESTFIELD LEADER · 2015-06-13 · WE8TFIEL0 MEMORIAL UBRAAV VrlSTRClD, H a. S THEWESTFIELD LEADER a: P Z m < — o « _l  The Leading

: THE B i s r n a n <SJ., LEADEB. THV&SD.VF. DECXXBEB I, I*T*

Children's Specialized HospitalSets Trends in Athletics

h= re-

Children's SpecialiHospital is ga-..-.;r.gnational repuu'.ior. :'c>rgar.izmg ard j-rorT.cwheelchair o"_*.>'.:cfor the pfcysxaLiycapped

Jean Bohr, preside.';-, ariisiase director of "-he Ne»Jersex Tourrcrr.er.'. o:Champions ja;c. thehospital is beccrr.;r.;recognized as a pioneer :rwheelchair athletics fororthopedic ally handicappedchJcrer, "

SignupBegins Jan. 1Jan. : will msrfc '.be-

beginning of :he :?7vgeneral enro!lrr,er.! p?r :•:>::for Medicare medical in-

TheTenriessee recer.tiy -*ber.?r.arc.r> Va'&kc" of the rec-reation therapy cieparirrjent

_ attended the Ter.r.ei~ee Kali'Workshop of Wheelchair

5por_s :r.or.i> de'itJersey

Theorr. Ne*

she - a i c-ne of ;:veirorr

Jur.iorrs o: the NaDeveic-prr.er.:

C

*ere won in a variety ofevents, according to age andstrength classificatsons.

Shelly Tneis^er. o' Haie-aor. s'^ept everj'Lhing insight, wtrjung a giitterir^trophy (a Ferr.ak Sports-msr.ship zr.c six go:drr.ecals ir. the s-:.fth=U thrff*.ciub 'j-jci. re : s \ . ^- ; . i rd

Rinaldo Keynotes DedicationOf New Hospital Equipment

Dedication ceremonies ; ucJs must be restored toof the Community Leu- • the patient as rapidly as

possible. Currently, theseobtained

Pro-

»r<e«ichs:rpiar.s : «• * - - ' - - : : ; r . g % ;<jr.£<?.r

•'•'• heelchair ahave *.o t«? crgax:;J:e L:f.je Le-arueschooj sports. '

>'.<-l5 age ca'.egorva cc-rr.pe:r.^f o . :'Jveir oloer rr.:-reenced cocr.tcrpan*

Foliow.r.g up

or

surance. Rober: EMaUfcof:

district managersaid necer.v.

During the f:r>: '.hre-:months of !S7*. peop'.e •- r>o -are other* if* e:.£:c-r r<-'A ho do rvo: r.avr rr.c-d a':insurance pfr^.e.-vor. j~ri~:Medicare r:. Z} err •:•".:M e d i c a i i n s u r a n c eprpte-clion -A:]) >u:r'. July :.19C*. for "Jicfi-e 'Abo erj-.:i:during the n-r.i-rz)enrollme-r:1. perioi

Those eligible includepeop>!e \>bo chose DO! ;o i~-roll dur;.ie their :r.it:aiperiod and thos-e *b:; <>ncohad this prelection cot wnodropped cut

Peop'e »bc. <-r.ro!i crjr.r.Ea genera; enrollment percoHill pay a premium higherthan lb? basic premium :!Lhere m a period of : ;months or more duringwhich they cou3d have ted.'this protection but c>d wtThe hasic premium for triepenoi ending June ]97-' ;<S8 20 a month. The .'.?•.»prerr.;urn * il! be anncrjr<ced :before the fienera)eriroUmer;! period

Any increase in thepremium is limited to thepercentage increase :r, czihsocial security benefits,which amounted to f- 5percent effective las- JuneEven so. Robert EWilluerth said. •£<•protection is still a bargain :

since the Federal Govern- '•merit pays more ihan 70 ipercent of the premium cost ;out of general revenue?. ;

Fuli information about the i1979 general enrollment •period will be available a;the Union County- Sccia) ,Security office -*el) I*; ore 'J a n u a r y . The office :slocated at 34? Westminster 'Ave . Elizabeth

-ere :r.v::e-d ;oK pe ' ^ 'K at theRecreation &r>6

-cciatior. ar-sua) -r. ;r. M:arr.;.

spr-rts

pacidress !NationalParts .Ai

The2-f rii is ief:r.::e!ythe direction of jc-^gerc-ompeators." "J-je> repor.eoihis v . « i "Therepis: ancphysical e™jcitors ^orkiri?•A-.'M har/ i icsp^d chiidrer.ci\? every macatzor. thatthey are pjiniine rr.eetssimilar ;<:i these cc>:>rc;natesby Children's SpeciahiecHcrspital Their interest,comments and cuestions

gSlaff merr.t*rs at Chil-

dren's Sprcahzed Hospitalhave co-spor.sored theCentra! Jersey InvitationalMeet and are planning thesecond meet for .'<5arch. andthey aiso assisted inpromoting the Tcurr^roeritof Cnampioris With eachmeet, reports Miss TibaucJo.the' experience for staffmembers and youngstersresults in the next prograrr,being t-etter coordinatedand staged

In fact. Miss Mal^of:repjr.ed to 'he delegatesabcrji f*c recent meetj i.iw h i c h C h i l d r e n ' sSpecialized Hctpita! par-ticipated - the anr^uai BurkeGames at Burke RehabiLta-lion Center in White PlainsN.Y. and the JuniorInvitational WheelchairTrack and Field Meet atMetuchen High Schoolsponsored by the Ne-*Jersey Masorjc Fraternity.

The rese ts have crawr.attection in the tri-siate ar.dmiddle Atlantic regions.v.hich are competitive zonesior the National WheelchairAthletic Association. .As thehospital participates in andspons-ors programf. athletesspread the word thrcughou;the co'jntry.

In the Burke games,youngsters from Chi'crer/sSpecialized Hospital wonsome medals, but the bissuccess occurred at theMetufben meet, wheremore than three cozenrriedais and special trophies

a i-iiC.T. saverOther •» •.r.r.ers Terr'>

Ero-r . . LINDEN, three

et: ;s s i a : ; - i r . : r'e.i-. v* c•us: severs i.v •_-* cl-b thre-

h:£.r. and 2K->ari push, and aV:ss t>rorae ir. '-he shoipjl. To i i

•eir.-.he Burroughs. NEWARK, areo-.re 22>-yarc f-sr. si/ . tr £nd?: "::ke 'cor t-oraes for ±-e r!ub

arvo flaivrr.: Evei>T Div.s.NEWARK, v* •• £wd-: '« i)>eshsTp-j! arid .•.a^e;;n and a <•>>arc dash 5i!\er. Seih Ar.r.L-.rera. METTITKEN. r*c-£o:ds ir, itir (•>yari dashar.d sialorr:: MarkOTa!!ahar,. MANTOLO-KING. i. club thrc*1 si'.verand :»o broraes ir. ihes-a'vbai! -J-J-CA and ;>> a.rddash. Feiicis Osborr.e.MOVTCLAIR. r*-o golds ir.the 2;C'-yarc push ar.csiajo— p!us three severs xthe ciub ihrcr*. sh:-:prjt an;40-yard cash: Der.is-e Perer.OARTERET. :»o golds ir.the slalom and relay plus'cur silvers ;r. the softbalit-hra*. club throw. 25-yarddash ar»d )'»yard pushHer.rv Sm:ih. MAN-TOU'KLNG. :<ri- gcid :r,s-ofibali •_hycr*'. dub thrcv.S-yard cash.:CO-yard push:silver slalom. Best MaleAthlete trophy

At the Burke carries.Terry Bro*T) "*on a javelint-rorae. Josue Corjceprion o!NEW BRUNSWICK.,a ec.idin •Aeigh'Jiftir.g a.-id r«obroiaes in -J» sbo'.pu: anJiavelj.n. and HelenLopatosky of MANVILLE- c.r, a -discus silv er and twobronzes in the 5hK>;p-j'. and;.avelin. Also corr.j-etir.g•« ere Evelyn Da\i? andKerry Jones of PLAIN-FIELD

Fusd were beld lastweek in tbe Overlookauditorium, with Con-gr tss tmc Matthew J.Rznaldo as keynote speak-er. Congressman RinaJdo.a former trustee of ibefund who has had a long-stacdicg icterest in tbeiractivities, discussed theirwork towards tbe treat-ment and advances ofleukemia.

Through the efforts andgenerosity of the Com-munity Leukemia Fundtwo important new piecesof ecuipraect have beenprovided to Overlook'spatients bringing the latestand tnost advanced andeffect ive met hods of cancerdiagnosis and treatment.namely, a HaemoneticsModel 50 Celi Separaior atSlv.4M and a Z^iss Photo-rricroscope III at J21 .H1.

Dr. Bernard M Wagoer.director of laboratories atOverlook said, -with tbecontinuing prominence ofcancer-related illnesses asa leading cau.se of death inthe Overlook service areaaiid with the dramaticincrease in the use andeffect ivecess of chemo-therapy treatinent. thesetwo pieces of equipmentwill be of critical im-portance in tbe care ofcancer patients, allowingus to get vitaJ informationon the patients' bloodcomponents."

The Haemonetics Model50 Cell Separator is anautomated rapid method ofs-eparaticg plasma, plate-lets, granulocytes andcoagulation factors fromtbe red cells in the MoodThese esseatiaJ blood com-ponents are often sup-pressed or destroyed incancer and leukemia pa-tients during the course ofchemotherapy treatment.In order to prevent senousbleeding problems andother resultant blood dis-orders, these blood prod-

i components are' from commercial servicesj at high costs csd often'• with long delays. The' Haemonetics Model 50 willj obtain tbe Decess-ary prod-

ucts whenever needed andI at a considers:;? savings: lo tbe patient. The systemalso is portable and will

: allow for plasma or plate-let-pboresis at the bedside

: in leukemic or myelomapatients.

Tbe Zeiss PhotorrJcro-• scope is a research instru-ment for tbe detailed study

!of cells. It is an advancedhigh-quality optics! systemcapable of utuzing im-

•'muDofluorescenc*. phasecontrast and bright fieldmicTOSoopy. opticalmethods which are essen-tial in classifying and iden-tifying abnormal c-ell types.The instrument *il! beuseful in motile rat g theresponse of ceUs to ther-apy. This tastnirrjer.t notonly represents a majoradvance in the cagr.cisis.management an : study of

leukemia and allied dis| orders but will also be

useful in diagnosing a host' of other disease entities. including renal disease and; coliagen vascular dis-

orders.Also officiating at the

ceremonies were GeorgeBennicger. vice presidentand counsel of the Com-munity Leukemia Fund;Thomas J. Foley. execu-tive vice president ofOverlook Hospital: Dr.Wagner; and Mrs. KarenBoyd. president of tbe fundwho presented Dr. Wagnerwith two plaques to beplaced upon the machineryon behalf of the fund.William A Idea spoke onbehalf of the memory ofDr. L. Michael Kuhn. adriving force in thedevelopment of the fund.and for Dr. Kuhn's dedica-tion and achievements inthe fields of bematologyand oncology. Dr. David P.Miller, heinatology andoncology specialist atOverlook, discussed theresearch and advances inthe field of leukemiacancer.

The firrt opfrs in htrcoryitoapo Pen. Un'c-r^i-f.t^

i purported to be bsfr^t trynan of the muiic turrirei.

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THE LEADER

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Davis NamedABM ManagerRalph E. Dav-,s ha>

appointed v.ce pres;der:and regj'-rii rr.ar.aEer trfAmencp" Buildins ?iia:n-lenance .."o.'s ABM Co •northeast region, it *ajarinounced (day b>- Jac): :

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Prior to his appo:r.tjr,eEi.'he "*£s atssistanl rt-ziorji!manaeer of the company''northwest ret'w) ir, .Sestije. :

Wash ' :

Davis joined ABM as a •management trainet aftrrEradualing from the iUniversity of Washington in |1961 Since then he has- held jva r ious managementposilions including branchmanager in Spokane andSeattle

He is active in the Lion'sClub and a member of theBuilding Owners and.Managers Association.

ABM Co. is the janitorialservice subsidiary nfAmerican Building *-!airvlenance Industrie.'- ole^dins building senicescompany. ABM Co. operatesover fti'branches in majorcities in the I'niied Stalesand Canada.

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